The beginnings of the Swiss Confederation

“They had grown somewhat thoughtful; then without warning it began again, horrible, as though the thing had sprouted wings and was riding toward them on the backs of fiery monsters, flaming and shrieking, a long, drawn-out cry: Here we come! It truly seemed as if an underworld were suddenly seized with the desire to break out through the hard earth. The sound was like a black, gaping abyss, and the sun now appeared to be shining from a darkened sky, glaring down more dazzling than ever, but as through from a hell, not the heavens.

The rushing crowd, apparently full of passion, drew closer. And the knights stood their ground; suddenly they seemed fused together. Iron men held out their lances; . . . lance upon lance stuck out so mindlessly, firm and unyielding–just the thing, you might think, for such an impetuous, raging human breast to impale itself on. Here, an idiotic wall of spikes; there, people half-covered with shirts. Here, the art of war, the most prejudiced there is; there, people seized with helpless rage.

There’ll never be anything to equal the battering with which these light mountain and valley men, driven and elevated by their fury, now battered their way into the clumsy, despicable wall, smashing and ripping it apart like tigers ripping apart a defenceless herd of cows. . . . Those on horseback were flung down like cardboard, with a crack like that of a paper bag blown up and burst between one’s hands. . . . Heads were scuffed by blows, appeared only grazed, yet proved to be bashed in. Blow followed blow, horses were knocked down, the fighting grew more and more frenzied, more violent, the duke was slain; it would have been a miracle had he not been. Those striking accompanied their blows with shrieks, as though these were only right, as though killing alone was not enough, a mere half-measure. End quote

That is how the Swiss writer Robert Walser described the battle of Sempach on July 9th, 1386, the battle that broke Habsburg power in their ancient homeland and paved the way for Switzerland to come together.

What we will do in this episode is look at how it came to pass that an army of Swiss militia defeated Archduke Leopold III, one of the most accomplished military men of his time, a man willing to make his knights fight on foot, with lances, rather than run mindlessly into a wall of arrows, and how he still lost.

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Transcript

Hello and welcome to the History of the Germans: Episode 205 – Sempach – the death of a Duke and the Birth of a Nation, also episode 3 of Season 11 – The Fall and Rise of the House of Habsburg.

“They had grown somewhat thoughtful; then without warning it began again, horrible, as though the thing had sprouted wings and was riding toward them on the backs of fiery monsters, flaming and shrieking, a long, drawn-out cry: Here we come! It truly seemed as if an underworld were suddenly seized with the desire to break out through the hard earth. The sound was like a black, gaping abyss, and the sun now appeared to be shining from a darkened sky, glaring down more dazzling than ever, but as through from a hell, not the heavens.

The rushing crowd, apparently full of passion, drew closer. And the knights stood their ground; suddenly they seemed fused together. Iron men held out their lances; . . . lance upon lance stuck out so mindlessly, firm and unyielding–just the thing, you might think, for such an impetuous, raging human breast to impale itself on. Here, an idiotic wall of spikes; there, people half-covered with shirts. Here, the art of war, the most prejudiced there is; there, people seized with helpless rage.

There’ll never be anything to equal the battering with which these light mountain and valley men, driven and elevated by their fury, now battered their way into the clumsy, despicable wall, smashing and ripping it apart like tigers ripping apart a defenceless herd of cows. . . . Those on horseback were flung down like cardboard, with a crack like that of a paper bag blown up and burst between one’s hands. . . . Heads were scuffed by blows, appeared only grazed, yet proved to be bashed in. Blow followed blow, horses were knocked down, the fighting grew more and more frenzied, more violent, the duke was slain; it would have been a miracle had he not been. Those striking accompanied their blows with shrieks, as though these were only right, as though killing alone was not enough, a mere half-measure. End quote

That is how the Swiss writer Robert Walser described the battle of Sempach on July 9th, 1386, the battle that broke Habsburg power in their ancient homeland and paved the way for Switzerland to come together.

What we will do in this episode is look at how it came to pass that an army of Swiss militia defeated Archduke Leopold III, one of the most accomplished military men of his time, a man willing to make his knights fight on foot, with lances, rather than run mindlessly into a wall of arrows, and how he still lost.

But before we start a quick reminder that this show is advertising free. No really, you will not hear me singing the praises of some product carefully curated for just your specific needs, or more likely not useful to you at all. Such luxury is ultimately a function of the generosity of a small but much appreciated band of patrons who have signed up on historyofthegermans.com/support.

This week our special thanks go to Chris O., Alexi G., the always supportive Mike F., Walter E., Stewart Walker, Sergey S. and Simona who have already signed up.

And with that, back to the show.

This season is entitled the Fall and Rise of the House of Habsburg. And since here the fall comes before the rise, it is the fall that we start with. If one tries to understand why the Habsburgs were able to keep a multicultural and multilingual empire together for 400 years, an empire that had not one but two capitals in Vienna and Madrid plus several smaller centres in Naples, Milan, Prague, Budapest and Brussels. An empire that at its height, spanned the globe and surrounded its greatest rival, the kingdom of France.

And all that these disparate territories, from Lima to Lwow had in common was not one individual king or emperor but the unflinching grip of a family that ruled them well into the 19th century when nationalist movement had long declared their existence obsolete.

To understand what made the Habsburg capable of such an unprecedented feat, it may help to understand the 150 years they spent in the wilderness, far from thrones and the vertiginous heights of European policy.

When we talk about the fall of empires and dynasties, it is very rarely a case of wile-e-coyote speeding over the cliff and crashing down. Great power blocks do not collapse straight into insignificance, they skid down the mountainside, occasionally grabbing hold of a boulder to rise up for a moment, before the next avalanche dislodges them again, until after decades or generations and after innumerable attempts at stabilisation, they hit rock bottom. We will see when rock bottom is for the Habsburgs, my best guess at this stage of my research is 1471, when Friedrich III sees his duchy of Austria overrun by his enemies and has to seek refuge in the empire, an empire that had largely forgotten about him and that he had not visited for 28 long years.

We have already watched the Habsburgs losing their footing for the first time, when king Albrecht I was murdered by his nephew John Parricida. One moment they were en-route to become the de facto hereditary rulers of the Holy Roman Empire and the next, they were just another ambitious family in the game of musical chairs that were the imperial elections in the 14th century. But they were still one of the most powerful of these families. In season 8 when we talked about the period between the Interregnum and the Golden Bull, I described it as a three-body problem where the Luxemburgs, the Habsburgs and the Wittelsbachs were roughly of equal power and influence, constantly ganging up two against one.

But that three-body problem went away with the rise of Karl IV to the imperial throne and his ruthless expansion of the Luxemburg powerbase from Bohemia westwards into Brandenburg and the Upper Palatinate whilst collecting options on Hungary and Poland. Neither Habsburg nor Wittelsbach could compete with that any longer.

A further relegation was the exclusion of the Habsburgs from the Seven Electors in the Golden Bull of 1356. Much has been made of this, though it is important to remember that neither the dukes of Austria nor the counts of Habsburgp had ever been part of the college of electors that had formed since around 1273. So not adding them was maybe not that much of a snub as it might look. Still we know that Rudolf the founder, the head of the family in 1356 took umbrage and forged the Privilegium Maius that claimed and – thanks to confirmation by the emperor – established a unique rank for the Habsburgs as Archdukes with wide ranging privileges in their own lands, privileges that made them more like kings then feudal vassals.

So, when Rudolf IV passed away prematurely in 1365, the House of Habsburg was certainly not what it was in 1308, but by no means down and out. They were a major force in the empire, holders of most august titles and – most importantly – united. They ruled Austria, Styria, Carinthia, Carniola, the Tyrol and their ancestral lands along both shores of the upper Rhine from Schaffhausen to north of Freiburg im Breisgau as well as much of German speaking Switzerland.

Rudolf’s death had come at an inopportune moment. He had been just 27 years old and his marriage to the daughter of emperor Karl IV had remained childless. Hence the duchy went to his brothers, Albrecht, aged 16 and Leopold, aged 14 at the time. The Wittelsbachs used this to make a bid for the Tyrol they had ruled until fairly recently. But the brothers defeated duke Stephen of Lower Bavaria and Tyrol stayed in the family.

Between the brothers a clear division of responsibilities emerged. Albrecht, called “with the plaid” was the elder and interested in administration and finance. Leopold was the military man. So, it was Leopold, the younger one, who achieved the victory in Tyrol at the ripe old age of 17.

Albrecht (with the Plaid)

Such a division of responsibilities could be a recipe for astonishing success, think Augustus and Agrippa or Bismarck and von Moltke (the elder). But it did not work that well in this case. Leopold believed his military prowess demanded a higher status than that of junior co-ruler.

Leopold III

So, contrary to the clear provisions left by Rudolf the Founder and his predecessors, Albrecht and Leopold agreed to divide up the Habsburg lands. Leopold received the periphery, that means Carinthia, Carniola, bits of Frioul as well as the Tyrol and the ancestral lands along the Upper Rhine. Albrecht took Austria and Styria. Still, the break was not designed to be permanent. The brothers swore to act in unison. Every member of the family was allowed to use all the family titles, including that of archduke and in case one branch died out, the other would inherit their lands before any other claimant.

Whilst Albrecht focused on consolidating his power over Austria and Styria, Leopold went off conquering. And he was moderately successful, expanding in two directions. He moved southwards and acquired Trieste. The city actually submitted voluntarily to his rule in order to get rid of the oppressive Venetians. Trieste gave the Habsburgs access to the sea and became the homeport of the Austrian navy – seriously, such a thing existed.

But his main objective was to build a connection between the two main Habsburg possessions, Austria in the East and the Swabian ancestral lands in the West. One important first step had been done by his brother Rudolf who had established a hold over Tyrol.

The next important acquisition was the county of Feldkirch, better known as Vorarlberg, an important road connection to lake Constance before it became a vehicle to extract large sums of money from thrill-seeking German and English skiers. Given Salzburg too had come under indirect Austrian rule as per the Privilegium Maius, the Habsburgs now possessed a land bridge all the way from Vienna to the eastern shore of Lake Constance. And with their Ancestral lands starting around the western shore of the lake, the grand strategic objective of a contiguous territory was within reach.

All that was needed to be brought in now were the lands south of Lake Constance and the left bank of the Rhine. And to save you scrambling for a map, let me tell you what the land south of lake Constance and the left bank of the Rhine is called today: The Swiss Confederation.

In 1379 when Leopold was put in charge the Habsburgs already had extensive possessions in this region. After all, the family had come from the Aargau near Brugg in the first place. They had replaced the former major players in the region, the Kyburgs and Zaehringer, they held castles and advocacies all throughout these lands. There were two free imperial cities here, Zurich and Berne, but even within those, the family had certain rights and supporters.

But recent generations of the family had let things slip. They had lost the position as imperial reeve over the cantons of Uri, Schwyz and Nidwalden. The defeat of an Austrian force at Morgarten in 1315 had further undermined their position. The cities, including Lucerne and Zug which they owned outright were less and less willing to yield to the Habsburg administrators’ demands.

Our man, archduke Leopold’s job was hence to defend the existing rights and reclaim those lost in the previous decades. And that meant specifically to take charge of the main cities in the region, Zurich, Basel, Lucerne, Solothurn and maybe even the mighty Berne. Each of these cities had a faction that supported the Habsburgs, usually made up of the long-distance traders who believed a mighty lord was better able to ensure the safety of the roads and the Alpine passes.

As one can imagine, Leopold’s expansionist policy did not remain unopposed. To understand this opposition, we have to take a closer look at this thing that would become known as the Swiss Confederation.

And I am afraid much, if not all the stories about the founding of the Swiss confederation are made up. Wilhelm Tell, did not exist, the Rütlischwur, did not take place, at least not in the way and at the time it is usually reported, the Bundesbrief may be a backdated, Arnold von Winkelried, also not a real person.

I personally think this is a pity. I would have loved to go on about

“One people will we be, — a band of brothers;
No danger, no distress shall sunder us.
We will be free men as our fathers were,
And sooner welcome death than live as slaves.
We will rely on God‘s almighty arm,
And never quail before the power of man.”

And to then go on to “Through this narrow pass he must come”.

But sadly, every single history of Switzerland I have read is adamant, that none of this ever happened. But that does not mean that the emergence of the Swiss confederation, which very much does exist, is not a great story. Only that the crucial moments weren’t 1291 or 1315, but 1386 and 1393.

But I am racing ahead.

We did already have a brief look into the beginnings of the Swiss confederation in episode 150 – Morgarten and Mühldorf” but let me just briefly recap.

When the Gotthard pass opened up in the 13th century, life for the people living in the alpine valleys on both sides of the pass changed fundamentally. Having been a forgotten land of subsistence farmers and herders, far from the centres of commerce and politics, they found themselves suddenly in close communication with Italy and southern Germany.

Recognising the strategic importance of the new route, the emperor Frederick II granted the lands immediately to the north of the pass, the cantons of Schwyz and Uri, possibly also Nidwalden, immediacy. In other words, these lands became part of the imperial demesne and were administrated by an imperial governor, a Vogt in German. This Vogt was initially a member of the House of Habsburg.

The inhabitants of these cantons were in the main peasants. There was a local aristocracy, though less numerous than in other parts of the empire. Village communities were close knit and enjoyed a high degree of autonomy due to the specific conditions of life in the mountains. This hostile environment required building paths and bridges, maintaining forests to protect against avalanches and required holding a food reserve for the harsh winters. All this was provided by the local community, not by a feudal lord.

Once the pass became a major thoroughfare, the locals found additional sources of income in transporting wares across and offering hospitality to travellers. And they were introduced to lucrative job opportunities far away.

Travellers told them about the incessant wars between the cities and lords in Northern Italy, wars that were fought mainly by hired mercenaries. The great condottiere were constantly on the lookout for sturdy young men, willing to have a go at anyone they told them to hack at. And these men from the alpine valleys were ideal for the job. They were used to physical exertion and violence, like almost everyone in the Late Middle Ages. But what made them so great was that they had no allegiance to any of the parties involved in the wars in Northern Italy. They did not care particularly for any of the cities; they had no link to the emperor and not even worry much about the pope and his excommunications.

The historian Volker Reinhard places the beginnings of the Swiss Confederation into this context. According to him the first compact amongst the tree cantons, the Bundesbrief of 1291 was actually produced 20 years later in 1308, and it wasn’t initiated by the people of the cantons, but by the emperor and his Vogt.

The key event according to him was the journey of emperor Henry VII to Rome. Henry VII was keen to have access to the famous fighting men from the mountains to cut his way south. Which is why he appointed one of his generals, Wernher von Homberg as imperial reeve for the three cantons. Von Homberg did indeed exist and was one of the Condottiere who made their living in the perennial Italian wars. Reinhard then goes on to say that Homberg was interested in a permanent arrangement between the three territories that would make it easier him to raise large contingents of soldiers. He therefore not only allowed them to draft the Bundesbrief but actually encouraged it. And as we heard last week, forging and predating documents was commonplace at the time. So, it is quite possible that they changed the date of the agreement in order to give the document added weight and credibility.

Werner von Homberg

Irrespective of when and why the arrangement was made, it is apparent that from the 14th century onwards the three cantons coordinated their actions and entered into further alliances jointly.

This alliance was first tested when a Habsburg army came up to the valleys to avenge an attack of the men of Schwyz against the Abbey of Einsiedeln. The Habsburg expeditionary force found itself defeated at the battle of Morgarten in 1315. This was certainly a crucial event in as much as a chivalric army of knights was beaten by a force that comprised mostly of peasants. What made this possible was in large part the topography, as the armoured riders travelled along a narrow road along a lake whilst the Swiss threw rocks and logs at them from the cliffs above. It is also possible that they used halberds for the first time, a weapon that would become a very effective tool to dislodge and then incapacitate armoured riders.

Battle of Morgarten

In the years after Morgarten, the Habsburgs were preoccupied with their war against Ludwig the Bavarian over the succession in the empire, leaving little room for revenge against these rebellious mountain people.

By the old notion that my enemy’s enemy is my friend, Ludwig the Bavarian supported the three cantons against the Habsburgs. He showered them lavishly with all sorts of freedoms, and, crucially, when their reeve, Wernher von Homberg died, Ludwig did not appoint a new reeve. As a consequence, the three cantons became de facto free to organise themselves as they wished with only the emperor as their overlord. And so, they did. They gradually removed what existed in terms of noble privileges and dues, so that by 1380 these three cantons consisted almost entirely of free men and women.

But the cantons weren’t really in anyone’s focus, unless one was trying to recruit soldiers. Where the Habsburgs and in particular duke Leopold III spent their energy was in the cities. These were a lot richer and a lot easier to control than the wild men and women of the valleys.

The Swiss cities differed in structure quite considerably from the cities in the other parts of the empire. As we discussed in episode 160 “the Golden Bull of 1356”, one of the basic rules of the Holy Roman Empire was that the cities were banned from inviting local lords to become citizens. The point of this prohibition was to stop cities from acquiring large territories. This is what had happened in Northern Italy in the 11th and 12th century and had made the communes powerful enough to defy and ultimately defeat the emperors.

The way these Italian cities had acquired their territories, the Contado, was by co-opting the local lords as citizens. The lord would hand over political control of his lands and in exchange was given a position on the city council, whilst keeping the income from his estates.

The Swiss cities defied the ban on co-opting local lords, the so-called Pfahlbürger. Which is how in particular Bern and Zurich could become veritable city states with territories that rivalled many principalities.

We should not believe though that this process was all polite and gentlemanly. It wasn’t quite the case that the city council would send a gold-rimmed invitation card to the local knight who would be so delighted, he immediately signed up. What preceded these takeovers was either that the local lord had run out of cash and had pawned his castle to the city, or the city had marched its militia before the castle gates.

These city militias were often well equipped and well trained. In 1375 the French lord Enguerrand de Coucy, the key protagonist in Barbara Tuchmann’s Distant Mirror, led a strong force of hardened French and Gascon mercenaries into the territory of the city of Berne. On Christmas day the city militia attacked them and slaughtered 800 of these veterans of the Hundred Year’s war. These city armies were not to be underestimated.

Guglerkrieg – the berne militia destroys the army of Enguerrand de Coucy

And these militias existed not only in the free Imperial cities of Bern and Zurich. Even those who were not, like Lucerne, Fribourg, and Solothurn embarked on a similar expansion policy and established sizeable military forces.

This expansion policy brought them into conflict with a) the powerful families of the region, in particular the Habsburgs and, on their western flank, the counts of Savoy, and, b) the nobles of Swabia who had formed associations to push back against the threat of being slowly but surely dragged under by the cities.

As we go through the 14th century these two developments, the expansion of the cities at the expense of the Habsburgs and the Habsburg efforts to connect their lands into one contiguous territory from Vienna to Basel headed for an inevitable clash.

It could have kicked off already at the Basel’s Ugly carnival of 1376. Basel lies exactly at one of the connection points between the Habsburg territories in Alsace, Breisgau and Switzerland. Hence one of Leopold’s objectives was to extend his control of the city. In that he had to deal with the opposition not just of the city council, but also of the bishop of Basel.

The bishop was comparatively easy, as he was broke and so Leopold was able to buy him out. Through this arrangement he acquired Kleinbasel, the part of the city on the opposite side of the river. In February 1376 Leopold invited his noble friends to Basel for a grand tournament. And since he needed the space, he demanded to use the main square in the city itself. The council, which comprised a large pro-Habsburg faction, permitted the tournament to go ahead.

But things went pear shaped quite quickly. The tournament took place as part of the carnival celebrations. Carnival for those who are not familiar is the massive party that takes place in catholic countries on the last few days before lent. Given the prospect of 40 days of restricted food choices and moderation in alcohol, carnival tends to be an exceedingly debauched affair. This is a medieval carnival, not carnival in Venice with masks and baroque music, or Brasilian Samba floats. This is – depending on stamina – a four-to-six-day bacchanal of drinking, dancing, mor drinking, more dancing, and – should there still be some energy left – doing some naughty stuff.

It isn’t hard to imagine what happened when a drunk crowd is confronted with dukes and knights prancing about on their horses in the market square as if they owned it. The mob stormed the enclosures and the drinking halls of the nobles. Duke Leopold barely escaped on a barge across the river and many of his guests were apprehended and locked up in the city hall for their protection. Still dozens of knights and their retainers lay dead.

The city council blamed the whole incident on bridge and tunnel people and hanged two of them to show its contrition. Nevertheless, duke Leopold procured an imperial ban over the city, which he then leveraged into a full takeover of the place.

In the meantime, the cities and the cantons had moved ever closer together in order to protect themselves against external forces, namely Leopold, but also the counts of Savoy. Ever since Morgarten, the different cities and cantons have signed agreements and alliances. This again, is nothing unusual. Similar things happened amongst the cities and territorial princes of southern Germany as well.

In 1370, one of these arrangements, the so-called Pfaffenbrief, took on a different quality. In it the three cantons, Uri, Schwyz and Nidwalden as well as the cities of Zurich, Lucerne, and Zug agreed a permanent alliance that was to bind them above and beyond other existing obligations. Previous arrangements had always been made for a fixed period and subject to pre-existing third party arrangement. Under the Pfaffenbrief, Lucerne, which was nominally a Habsburg city, shed its obligations to the Austrians in their entirety and instead aligned the exercise of political power with the other signatories.

This was a new type of arrangement. It was permanent and it took priority over all other agreements. Its participants were no longer just allies, but small c confederates. The Swiss constitutional lawyers regard this document as the foundational step towards the Swiss Confederation.

Surprisingly the Habsburgs did not react to this move. They had lost control of Lucerne and also Zug, where their position had been stronger, but still, they did not budge. That was in part due to the death of Rudolf the Founder in 1365 and the subsequent wars over the Tyrol and the squabbling between the brothers.

When these conflicts had been resolved It became time for Leopold III to bring this conflict to a resolution. Basel had been a major success which he followed up in the early 1380s with the acquisition of two counties near Berne.

It was now clear to everyone where this train was heading. In response Berne, Solothurn, Zurich and Zug entered into an alliance of the traditional temporary and limited kind with a number of southern German cities, promising each other support in case of attack. Leopold in turn firmed up his links with the Swabian nobility on both banks of the Rhine.

The signing of the Konstance accord with the German cities encouraged the Swiss to strike first. Zurich attacked Rappertswil, Zug the city of St. Andreas. Lucerne co-opted the city of Sempach. All of these had been Habsburg possessions.  Now the war was on.

Leopold III called upon all his vassals, from Tyrol, from Alsace and the Breisgau, he wrote to his allies, the knightly associations in Swabia and the Alps and hired crossbowmen from Italy and Flanders. They were all to gather in his city of Brugg in the shadow of the ancient family home, the Habichtsburg. As always numbers are unreliable, but the most likely figure is about 3,000 men, all rearing to teach these peasants and townsfolk a lesson they should never forget.

The first town to be educated in the ways of the feudal world, was Lucerne.

Lucerne immediately called on the men of Uri, Schwyz and Nidwalden to come to their aid. Which they did. It seems the other cities who had signed the recent alliance did not appear on the battlefield, or in the case of the German cities, only as observers and mitigators.

There are two ways to describe the battle that followed. The first one is from the contemporary sources. These say that a battle had taken place and note who won. That, I am afraid is not suitable podcast material.

Therefore, here comes the more entertaining, but maybe less accurate version:

Once Leopold had spotted the enemy in an open field near the town of Sempach, he asked the gros of his knights to dismount and form a strong square, protected by a wall of lances. Within the square the crossbowmen were to release their bolts into the mass of enemies. Meanwhile two detachments of heavy cavalry positioned themselves on the flanks and, once the enemy had engaged the centre, were to attack the Swiss from the sides. Dismounting the knights and integrating infantry into the strategy was a major move away from the gung-ho approach at Crecy, Poitiers and Mühldorf. But then the Habsburgs owed much of their success to their willingness to bend the rules of chivalry when necessary. Plus, this was a tactic that had led French forces to victory over another army of townspeople, those of Flanders, just four years earlier.

And initially the plan worked. The Swiss fierce attacks of the Habsburg line ran again and again into the unyielding wall of lances. And out of the square the crossbowmen sent their deadly bolts into the lightly armoured forces of Lucerne and his allies. The story goes that when wave after wave had been broken by the Habsburg resolve, a bear of a man stepped forward, Arnold von Winkelried.  Entrusting his wife and children to his comrades he rushes forward and grabbed a dozen or more of the enemy spikes, impaling himself. And as he fell, so did the spears buried in his chest. Over the hero’s body stepped his comrades, cutting deep in the duke’s phalanx.

Their line broken, the square formation fell apart. The Habsburg lion went down with his standard-bearer. Duke Leopold who had been in the centre of the square seized the flag from the dying hand of his vassal to once more rally his troops, but it was too late. His forces turning, he was offered the opportunity to flee, but refused uttering: “shall I, Leopold, look on from afar as my brave knights fight and die. Here in my country, and with my people, I will either conquer or perish”. His dead body was found the next morning, together with 400 noble knights whose names the victors carefully recorded on the walls of a chapel they erected over the battlefield.

Whether or not this was the way it unfolded, we will never know. The earliest detailed descriptions of the battle date from 1480, almost a century later. Arnold von Winkelried existence is even less likely, since his deed bears suspicious resemblance to much older Germanic folktales and a man of this name appeared in the 16th century as a hero of the Swiss guards.

But what is fact is that the forces of Lucerne, Uri, Schwyz and Nidwalden defeated the army of duke Leopold of Austria, and devastatingly so. In its wake the nobility in the south was much diminished. Many families found their sons and heirs did not come back and lost their lands to territorial princes, including most cynically, the Habsburgs themselves.

Habsburg power in what is today Switzerland was largely wiped out. Not immediately, but the cities, Zurich, Berne, Lucerne, Zug, and Solothurn continued their expansionist policy. Basel shook off Habsburg control. The local lords, who could no longer hope for meaningful Habsburg assistance caved, handed over political control and became citizens. In 1388 there was one more battle between the Swiss and the Habsburgs, which the Habsburgs again lost.  In 1393 the existing union of Uri, Schwyz, Nidwalden, Lucerne, Zug and Zurich added Berne, Solothurn and Glarus. This “Old Federation” would last until 1481 and in that period would push back Habsburg influence all the way to the Rhine River, taking even their ancestral seat, the Habsburg itself.

Leopold III’s body was brought to the grand abbey of Königsfelden, originally built as a memorial to the murdered king Albrecht I. Whilst the Swiss regard Sempach as one of the greatest battles in their history, the Habsburgs developed a very different narrative. As they saw it the great general, brave fighter and chivalric knight had been murdered through treachery by an uncouth rabble. His heroic refusal to be rescued from the battlefield made him into a martial idol. Over time the memory of Leopold III got mashed up with that of saint Leopold, the 12th century Babenberger duke the Habsburgs had already incorporated into their made-up family history.

But apart from expanding the family lore, the death of Leopold III was a catastrophe. He left behind four sons, four sons who did not get on with each other. Nor did they get on with their uncle and later their cousin from the other branch of the family. So next week we will meet a whole bunch of new Austrian archdukes, William the Courteous, Leopold the Fat, Ernest the iron-willed and Frederick with the empty pockets. A further division of the territory was at hand. The Habsburgs were heading downhill at speed. As I said, in this family it is the fall that comes before the rise.

I hope you come along for the tumble. And if you want to go back to some of the wider background of this story, check out episodes 150 about Morgarten, 152 about Margarete Maultasch and the acquisition of Carinthia and Tyrol, 166 about the Great Schism which overlaid all that went on at the time and 165 on king Wenceslaus the Lazy who was at least formally in charge of the empire at that time.

And if you find all of this worth supporting, go to historyofthegermans.com/support, where you can find various options to keep this show on the road and advertising free.

The Privilegium Maius

In a niche to the left of the main altar in the Stephansdom, the great cathedral in the center of Vienna, somewhat hidden by later decorations stands a cenotaph. On its cover you see two figures lying side by side, each nearly two meters long and wearing splendid clothes, their feet resting on two lions. The figures are wearing what looks like crowns, a band surmounted by 12 spikes. A royal couple no doubt.

There is an inscription surrounding them, but you will be unable to read it. It is written in a script I have never seen before, the Alphabetum Kaldeorum. This script, it is said, comes from the ancient Chaldeans, a peoples living in Babylon in biblical times.

We know what it says on the cenotaph, because there is a conversion table from this script into Latin script held in the state library in Munich. The mystery revealed we can now read the text, which merely says: “This is the grave of duke Rudolf the Founder” .

Who was this man who wrote his name and title in a secret script onto his funeral monument, a script, most people believe he had created himself,  and who called himself “the founder”, a name he is still known to us today. What is he the founder of? Why is he wearing a crown when he was only a duke? How come he is one of the most important early Habsburg, yet reigned for merely 7 years?

This is a story of myths and mysteries, of tangible political objectives, elaborate forgeries, a tale that features letters by Julius Caesar and Nero that reveal an unexpected fondness for this land on the edge of the empire. Ah, and Hercules’ son is also making an appearance – in Austria.

Seriously, this is what we are looking at in this episode.

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Transcript

Hello and welcome to the History of the Germans: Episode 204 – Rudolf IV, the Founder and Forger, which is also episode 2 of Season 11: The Fall and Rise of the House of Habsburg.

In a niche to the left of the main altar in the Stephansdom, the great cathedral in the center of Vienna, somewhat hidden by later decorations stands a cenotaph. On its cover you see two figures lying side by side, each nearly two meters long and wearing splendid clothes, their feet resting on two lions. The figures are wearing what looks like crowns, a band surmounted by 12 spikes. A royal couple no doubt.

There is an inscription surrounding them, but you will be unable to read it. It is written in a script I have never seen before, the Alphabetum Kaldeorum. This script, it is said, comes from the ancient Chaldeans, a peoples living in Babylon in biblical times.

We know what it says on the cenotaph, because there is a conversion table from this script into Latin script held in the state library in Munich. The mystery revealed we can now read the text, which merely says: “This is the grave of duke Rudolf the Founder” .

Who was this man who wrote his name and title in a secret script onto his funeral monument, a script, most people believe he had created himself,  and who called himself “the founder”, a name he is still known to us today. What is he the founder of? Why is he wearing a crown when he was only a duke? How come he is one of the most important early Habsburg, yet reigned for merely 7 years?

This is a story of myths and mysteries, of tangible political objectives, elaborate forgeries, a tale that features letters by Julius Caesar and Nero that reveal an unexpected fondness for this land on the edge of the empire. Ah, and Hercules’ son is also making an appearance – in Austria.

Seriously, this is what we are looking at in this episode.

But before we start let me pass on some news about the podcasting industry. Last week Wondery closed its doors, one of the leading producers of narrative podcasts. The argument brought forward by Amazon, its parent company, was, that the future was video and audio only was simply no longer enough to keep listeners engaged. On one hand I should be grateful that a competitor has fallen by the wayside, but that would be short sighted. Most media lives of the fact that people are using it. They make it part of their day, like listening to radio or watching television. And once a habit disappears, the industry disappears with it, just look at newspapers. So, if you guys enjoy the kind of audio first product that we and many other podcasters produce, please keep listening and if you feel like supporting the effort either by spreading the word about great shows or helping creators financially, please do so.

And special thanks to Nicholas S., Ruben de G., Anne Hanson, Paul H., Martin, Matthias D., John A., Marian and Felix F. who have signed up on historyofthegermans.com/support.

And with that, back to the show

Last week we ended with the birth of Rudolf, the eldest son of duke Albrecht the Wise of Austria, on All Saints day 1339. This event that brought enormous relief not only to his parents, but to all the people in the land.

When he saw the light of day for the first time, the legendary fecundity of the Habsburg family had hit a bad snag. His father did have five brothers, but all of them and all of their sons had died. If Rudolfs mother, at the time already 39 years old, and his father suffering cruelly from rheumatoid arthritis, had not by some miracle conceived him and then three more sons, the Habsburgs would have ended as a footnote in European history, rather than as a whole library. And the lands of Austria, Styria, Carinthia and Carniola would have been torn part in a war of succession, as much of Europe would be when such a snag happened again in 1701 and 1740.

But this time, it didn’t. Rudolf lived and so did his younger brothers Albrecht and Leopold. And what was almost as miraculous was that his father Albrecht the Wise survived until Rudolph was 19 and hence able to take over the political leadership of his duchy.

During the 14th century the Habsburgs pursued two main territorial objectives. The first was to either acquire or at least contain their neighbours, the kingdoms of Bohemia and Hungary. Acquisition had been the objective in the earlier parts of the century when the original dynasties of these lands, the Premyslids and Arpads had died out. Rudolph’s grandfather, king Albrecht I had made a bid for both, but had his hopes cut short when he was cut short by his nephew.

By the time of Rudolf’s birth, acquisition was no longer an option. Bohemia had gone to the great rivals of the Habsburgs, the counts of Luxemburg, and it was now ruled by one of Europe’s most famous chivalric knights, John, the Blind King of Bohemia, whilst Hungary had gone to the Angevins from Naples whose astute policies and growing wealth would make them the most powerful rulers in Central europe. Therefore containment was the dominant policy. Keeping friendly relations to avoid invasion was the order of the day in Vienna.

With the east sealed off, their main focus turned west. Like all other princely families, the Habsburgs had long realised that the only way to achieve supremacy in the empire required them to hold a large and contiguous territory where they could move soldiers and gold from one end to the other without having to cross someone else’s land. In 1339, when Rudolf was born, the Habsburgs were a long way away from that objective.

Their ancestral lands in the triangle between Basel, Strasburg and Freiburg lies 700 km west of Vienna. In between these two territories lay the duchy of Carinthia, the county of Tyrol, the archbishopric of Salzburg, the county of Feldkirch, the abbey of St. Gallen, the bishopric of Constance and the cities in what is now German speaking Switzerland. All of these had to be brought under Habsburg control if they were to create that contiguous territory stretching all along the Northern side of the Alps.

Carinthia and Tyrol were the first on the shopping list. And the Habsburgs were lucky in as much that Henry, duke of Carinthia and count of Tyrol was on his last leg. All he was leaving behind was a daughter, Margarete. But then the Habsburgs were also unlucky, because Margarete had been married to Johann-Heinrich of Moravia, the son of king John of Bohemia from the House of Luxemburg.

At this time there were three families fighting for supremacy in the empire, the Habsburgs, the Wittelsbachs who controlled Bavaria and the Palatinate and the Luxemburgers who were kings of Bohemia and counts of Luxemburg. Each of these powers were roughly equal in size. Like in any three body system, politics were extremely fragile. Each side had to balance their desire to add territory against the risk that the other two would gang up on you if you became too greedy.

The inheritance of Henry of Carinthia was the matter that would push this system out of kilter.

As far as law and custom was concerned, Carinthia and Tyrol were to go to Henry’s daughter Margarete and her husband Johann-Heinrich of Luxemburg. But if that happened, Austria would be completely surrounded by its rivals. The Luxemburgs in Bohemia and Carinthia, the Wittelsbachs on their western border and the Hungarians in their back. That was obviously hugely concerning for Albrecht the Wise, but also to the emperor Ludwig the Bavarian. King John of Bohemia had already made some major gains in Silesia and in his homelands on the western border of the empire, so the precarious power balance was already a bit lopsided. Adding Carinthia and Tyrol would seriously upset the apple cart.

So Ludwig and Albrecht made a deal. The Habsburgs were to receive Carinthia, Carniola and the southern part of Tyrol, whilst Ludwig would get the northern part of Tyrol. Margarete and her husband would be shoved out of  the way.

And that is exactly what they did, or tried to do. In 1335, Henry of Carinthia had just died, the emperor Ludwig the Bavarian declared Carinthia and Tyrol vacant fiefs and awarded them to Albrecht and his brother Otto. Margarete, JoIhann-Heinrich and the rest of the Luxemburger clan were flabbergasted by such blatant thievery. A war was now inevitable. The only problem was that king John was back in Paris recovering from a serious injury that would ultimately turn him blind and his son Karl did not have an army at hand.

So it was left to Margarete and her husband to defend her inheritance. Tyrol straddles both sides of the Alps and is a country of deep valleys, ravines and craggy summits, of castles built into the sides of soaring mountains, a place a comparatively small but determined force could easily defend against even large invading armies. The teenagers, helped by the local lords, took advantage of the topography and sent the Habsburgs packing. Carinthia was harder to defend and less loyal, so it became part of Austria, which it still is.

Margarete and Johann-Heinrich were deeply irritated over the loss of Carinthia and lobbied John of Bohemia to take Carinthia back by force. John who never backed out of a fight invaded Austria. The campaign was a roaring success and the Habsburg army fled. But then John of Bohemia just returned home, not making the slightest effort to take back Carinthia.

The next year the Habsburgs attacked Bohemia and John, most unusually, ceded the battlefield. And then everyone went home.

Having been robbed of Carinthia and Carniola and watching her husband’s family standing by without really helping her, made her, as an Englishmen would say, a bit miffed. But then rumours began circulating that the Luxemburgs were prepared to cede the Tyrol to the Habsburgs for some gains elsewhere, Margarete knew the game was up, unless she did something. And so she did something unprecedented, she threw her husband out. Just like that.

She went to emperor Ludwig the Bavarian to protect her against the inevitable retaliation from the Luxemburgs and a potential invasion by the Habsburgs. Ludwig too was keen on the Tyrol, who wouldn’t be. It is gorgeous.

There were a few problems though. Margarete’s marriage to Johann-Heinrich was valid as far as the church was concerned. And incessant philandering, squeezing one’s wife’s land’s dry and paranoid killing of political opponents weren’t recognised reasons for divorce. Only  consanguinity or failure to consume were. The chances that the pope would grant a divorce to help an excommunicated emperor who had just made sure the pope had no more say in imperial elections, was pretty much 0.0000000%.

But Ludwig the Bavarian was an emperor. And as emperor he granted her a civil divorce, the first civil divorce in European history since the Romans. That set Margarete free to marry the son of Ludwig, another Ludwig.

This was not only a massive scandal, but also caused a major shift in imperial politics. As far as the Habsburgs were concerned, working with Ludwig the Bavarians was no longer of any value.  Ludwig had stepped on their toes in Tyrol and hard.

Albrecht changed his allegiance and sought to get closer to the Luxemburgs. And that is why Rudolf, aged five, was put in play to marry Catherine, the daughter of the Karl of Luxemburg, the future king of Bohemia.

Which in turn was the first step in a series of events that would lead to the downfall of emperor Ludwig the Bavarian and the rise Karl to become emperor Karl IV. Ludwigs landgrab in Tyrol had not only alienated the Habsburgs but other princes too. And when Ludwig seized the inheritance of count William of Holland as well, the empire went into revolt.

In 1346, 5 years after Margarete had thrown out Johann-Heinrich  of Luxemburg and 4 years after negotiations about the marriage between Rudolf and Catherine had begun, Karl, heir to Bohemia, was elected king of Romans in opposition to Ludwig the Bavarian. The subsequent war was won by Karl (episode 156), in part because the Habsburgs stayed neutral.

It would still take another 11 years before, in 1357 Rudolf of Habsburg and Catherine of Bohemia were joined in matrimony, but they were. Nevertheless things had changed dramatically by then. When in 1330 the Luxemburgs and Habsburgs were stell on eye level, by 1357 they were no longer. First the blind king John had significantly expanded the Luxemburg territory. Now his son Karl IV was busy to build a territorial connection from his lands in Bohemia all the way to Luxemburg in the West, something the Habsburg at that point could only dream of. And even more importantly, Karl had found a way to mobilise the riches of Bohemia on his behalf.

Meanwhile the Wittelsbach had also declined in stature as various divisions reduced the resources any one of them could mobilise. So even in combination, the Habsburgs and Wittelbachs were no longer able to seriously threaten the Luxemburgs under Karl IV.

Therefore the marriage between Rudolf and Catherine sealed not an alliance of equal partners.

And by how much their power was diminished became obvious when Karl IV promulgated his Golden Bull of 1356, which set the final list of prince electors. Who was missing from that list? The Bavarians and the Habsburgs. Yes, one could argue that the list had been informally agreed since the 1250s, and the Habsburgs were never on it, but still. If the constellation had been as it was 30 years earlier, they should have got on. But it wasn’t and they weren’t.

Despite that snub, the marriage still went ahead. The Habsburgs had become a junior partner in the grand dynastic project of the House of Luxemburg.

We are now in the year 1358 and finally, Albrecht the Wise succumbed to his many ailments. Rudolf took over and he tried desperately to bring the family back up to the status he believed it deserved.

To do that he pursued several avenues.

For one he wanted to elevate the status of Austria and his capital Vienna by establishing a bishopric there. As we know, establishing new bishopric is not easy. It is not as hard as it was in the 11th century when the emperor Henry II had to kneel before his bishops and admit to his own infertility to be allowed to set up Bamberg. But it was still a difficult thing to do. And even though the process had only just begun and the outcome was uncertain, Rudolf kicked off the construction of a magnificent church in Vienna, the Stephansdom. His plan included two towers, as was the prerogative of a cathedral, though that second tower was never built.

In 1365 he founded a university in Vienna, the second oldest in the empire after Prague, again in an attempt to get on eye level with his father-in-law.

And he did get his reward for loyalty, when he acquired the Tyrol. Not by force, but through an agreement with Margarete Maultasch, whose son Meinhard had died and who had fallen out with the Wittelsbachs. The Wittelsbachs were of course unhappy about that, but could not do much since the senior partner, emperor Karl IV, held his hand over his son-in-law.

Then the Habsburg-Luxemburg partnership grew even closer. Karl and Rudolf agreed that in case either of their families were to die out, the other would inherit their lands in their entirety. Whilst at this point either side had at least a few potential male heirs, the probability of such an event was not very high. But when we look back, the average time one family occupied a throne during that period was 150 to 200 years. So this was a long term option that became ever more valuable to either party as time progressed. And as the option gained in value so did the partnership, tying the Habsburgs ever closer to the Luxemburgs.

Beyond these tangible shifts, Rudolf triggered a mental and legal shift for the House of Habsburg that would be even more significant than the Stephansdom, the university and inheritance option.

In 1358 or 1359 Rudolf’s librarians “discovered” some remarkable ancient documents deep in the bowels of the ducal archives. In total these were five documents.

The oldest dates to October 4, 1058. In it the emperor Henry IV confirms the existence of certain privileges that have been awarded to the dukes of Austria by  -drumroll- the emperors Julius Caesar and Nero. And given such letters are of such august provenance, here they are in their entirety (quote):

“We, Julius Caesar, Imperator and Priest of the Gods, we, supreme ruler of the imperial land and Augustus, we, sustainer of the entire world, grant Roman citizenship and our peace to the eastern march, the land and its inhabitants. We command you, by the strength of our triumph, to obey our uncle, the senator, because we have given you to him and his heirs and descendants as a fief to be held in perpetuity [….]

We grant him and his successors all the benefits of the aforementioned Eastern Lands. Furthermore, we appoint our uncle and all his successors as advisors to the most secret Roman council, so that from now on no important business or cause shall be undertaken without his knowledge.

Given at Rome, capital of the world, on Friday, in the first year of our reign and the first year of the gold tax.”

And here is the second letter

“We, Nero, friend of the gods and propagator of their faith, preceptor of the power of Rome, emperor, Caesar, and Augustus. We have agreed with our entire senate that the land of the Eastern March should be held in esteem above all other lands, because it and its inhabitants are praiseworthy above all those who are subjects of the Roman Empire.

 Therefore, we declare that land to be granted our eternal peace and be exempt from all taxes and censuses that have been or will be imposed in the future by imperial power or by us or our successors or by anyone else. We also desire that the same land remain permanently free. We also decree by Roman authority that no adversity shall befall the aforementioned land from anyone. If anyone should act contrary to this, as soon as he has done so, he shall be under the ban of the Roman Empire and shall never be released from it.

Given at Lateran on the day of the great god Mars.” End quote

In the subscript the emperor Henry IV explains that after translating these imperial letters from the pagan language into Latin he was so impressed, he passed control of the archbishopric of Salzburg and ownership of the immensely rich abbey of Lorsch to duke Henry II of Austria.

Right

The next charter dated September 17, 1158 was even more expansive. In it the emperor Barbarossa granted the dukes of Austria in 17 articles the indivisibility of their territory, automatic inheritance of the duchy by the first born, including the right to pass it through the female line, the monopoly over jurisdiction without appeal to imperial courts, no obligation to appear at imperial diets or support the emperor militarily or financially, full control over the church in Austria etc., etc., pp.

Effectively Barbarossa allowed Austria to enjoy all benefits of participation in the empire without any of the obligations. And to mark this special status, the duke of Austria was named a Palatinus Archidux, an imperial paladin and arch duke, who had to have precedence at all official events, sitting to the right of the emperor, wearing a ducal hat adorned with an eastern crown. If you look at the artwork for this episode, you can see Rudolf wearing this very special hat.

The next three documents are dated to the reigns of emperor Frederick II and King Rudolf I and confirmed the previous two after adding some further rights and privileges.

What an amazing find! Final proof that Austria and therefore its rulers were exceptional. Their endorsement, even descent from Caesars uncle gave them a pedigree none of the princely families ion the empire could match. They have been granted not just full autonomy by the great emperors of antiquity but also a permanent seat on the council, and no important decisions could be taken without consulting them.

So astonishing were these far reaching privileges, some people had doubts about the veracity of in particular the letters from Caesar and Nero. When the emperor Karl IV was asked to confirm these privileges, he sent copies to one of the 14th century most learned men, Francesco Petrarca, to check them out. Petrarca zoomed in on the imperial letters. His answer was not very flattering. He called them “such ridiculous forgeries, they must have come from either an “arch-jester, a bellowing ox, or a screaming donkey”. But he did not say that the document itself was a forgery, only that the chancellor of the emperor Henry IV way back in the 11th century who had included them into the charter, had been duped by a tremendously bad hustler.

Petrarch was not only one of the foremost scholars of Roman antiquity, he was also very much attached to his head. And such an important appendix could easily be lost if one accuses the duke, excuse me, palatine archduke of Austria of forgery. Much better and equally effective to claim some long dead scribe had been had by an unknown and equally very dead scoundrel.

When people refer to the privilegium maius, which is the name these documents are known by today, they usually describe it as a reaction to the snub of being left out in the list of Prince electors in Karl IV’s Golden Bull. And there was certainly an element of that here. The insistence on being enfeoffed at home whilst sitting atop a horse rather than kneeling before the emperor, the focus on the seating plan and the title of archduke, complete with special crown, feels a bit like sour grapes.

And I think I did describe it in such terms as well when I first mentioned it in episode 161.

But upon reflection and reading the actual text, it becomes clear that Rudolf pursued some tangible political objectives with this forgery that go well beyond the restoration of his injured pride.

The Privilegium Maius is based on a genuine privilege issued by Barbarossa in 1158, the so-called Privilegium Minus. There the dukes of Austria were already granted far reaching privileges and significant independence from the empire. Rudolf expanded this charter, adding things like primogeniture, full inheritability in the female line, full exemption from imperial courts, sovereign-like autonomy and the right to appoint bishops. And all these privileges were then to be applied to possessions outside Austria as well. As we will see, these provisions would be used by Rudolf and his successors to solidify their control of their territory. It was even used as late as 1740 to legitimize the inheritance of Maria Theresia.

When all these papers were handed to Karl IV for confirmation, he treated them, not as forgeries, but as some sort of shopping list. He granted his son in law some of the privileges he had included, but rejected others. It would be another Habsburg ruler, Friedrich III who would confirm the whole of Privilegium maius and all its components, putting it on the statue book where it remained until 1806. It was only in 1852 that it was officially recognized as a forgery.

So, as far as fakes go, this was probably one of the most consequential forgeries in European history.

That being said, the Privilegium Maius is not just about status and privileges, it is also about the way the Habsburgs saw themselves.

It is not unusual, or arguably even necessary for a ruling family to have an origin myth that lifts them above mere mortals. The more extreme versions of that were the Merovingians who traced themselves to a mythical sea monster, Julius Caesar who claimed descent from Venus and the emperors of Japan tracing themselves to the Sun Goddess Amaterasu. In Christian Europe the descent from gods was replaced by emphasizing saints in the family tree, think Saint Louis for the French, Saint Stephen for the Hungarians, Edward the Confessor for the English, St. Olaf for the Norwegians and St. Wenceslaus for the Bohemians. Charlemagne, though not an official saint in the catholic church performed a similar function for the Holy Roman Emperors. Lesser houses did the same if they were lucky to have a suitable ancestor.

The Habsburgs had the problem that they had only recently risen to prominence and none of the their members had yet lived up to the basic standards of sainthood. In fact the only member of the family who got close was the very last Austrian emperor Charles I, the one whose heart lies in the chimney of the Holy House in Muri.

So, in the absence of one of their own, the Habsburgs appropriated Leopold of Babenberg, from the family that had ruled Austria from its inception until 1246. Unfortunately for the Habsburgs, they had zero blood relationship to the Babenbergers. But that did not stop them pretending they had. Many Habsburgs were given Leopold and Friedrich as first names, names that had been dominant in the Babenbergers family and had not appeared in the Habsburg family tree before.

So far, so normal. But then the Habsburgs go several steps further.

It is around the same time that Rudolf’s forgers made up ancient charters that an anonymous writer compiled the “Austrian Chronicle of the 95 Rulers”. In it we hear that Austria was founded, by the Jewish knight Abraham of Temonaria, 810 years after the flood, which equates to roughly 1500 BC. From then on, Austria and its ruling family were at the epicenter of European history. In an unbroken line that included Jewish patriarchs, the roman emperors and the Babenberger dukes of Austria, the right to rule the known world had come down to the House of Habsburg.

Such genealogical romances were not unusual at the time, remember that Barbarossa was seen as a descendant of the kings of Troy, but this tale is unique in its mix of biblical, ancient roman and relatively recent Austrian history. And they do not skip anyone. Austria, which the ancients called Noricum, was allegedly founded by Norix, the son of Hercules. Vienna was called that because Caesar had founded the city and had stayed there for 2 years, a Biennium and so forth and so forth.

This may all look like ridiculous overcompensation by a family that had risen fast, was seen as nouveau riche by its peers, and now found itself in decline.

But there is also another way to look at it. When Rudolf IV died 1365, barely 27 years old, he had laid the foundation for the sense of exceptionalism that will permeate the family from here on out. And he had given them the physical embodiment of that exceptionality, the title and headgear of an archduke, a title that does not exist in any other context and instantly identifies its bearer as a Habsburgs.

It is in this way that Rudolf was right when he called himself “the founder”. He may not have founded the dynasty in the sense of being its ancestor, but he founded the notion that being a Habsburg was something exceptional, something that goes beyond just being an important prince.

Rudolf left no sons, so that the role of the head of the family had to go to his brothers, Albrecht, called “with the plait” and Leopold, called the Just. Both were teenagers at the time and almost immediately quarreled. These facts, their youth and their quarrel sparked a last Wittelsbach attempt to recapture the Tyrol which the brothers just about managed to rebuff. Despite this joint success they kept going at each other, until in 1379 they divided the Habsburg lands amongst themselves. That was in direct violation of the Privilegium Maius, a long list of ordinances issued by previous archdukes and an explicit agreement made between the three brothers. It seems the notion of a common Habsburg mission had not yet had enough time to gestate into a tool that kept the family together.

And like these division often did, it dropped the family down another notch in the European power stakes. The other was the campaign that on July 9th, 1386, brought the younger and more impetuous brother, Leopold, to a hill near the Sempach lake where he would bring about the birth of a nation and the loss of his ancestral homelands. That we will discuss next week.

And before I go, just a big thank you to all of you who are supporting the show. Your encouragement in all its forms, not just financial, is what keeps this podcast going. If you want to become a patron, go to my website, historyofthegermans.com/support and sign up there. And let me know If you wish to have your full name read out to be there for eternity, or if you prefer just first name and initial.

Last thing, if you want to go into more detail on the things I mentioned or hear them in a different context, go to the episode website – the link is in the show notes. I have included hyperlinks to previous episodes where we discussed these topics, namely episodes 152 about Margarete Maultasch, 156 and 159 about the rise of Karl IV, 160/161 about the Golden Bull and 196 to 199 about the decline of the Wittelsbachs.

And with that, lets reconvene next week and go to Switzerland….

The Beginnings of the Habsburg Dynasty

In the small town of Muri, about halfway between Zurich and Lucerne stands a grand baroque abbey. And when I say grand, I mean seriously grand, St. Blasien kind of grand. Its central dome is to this day the largest such structure in Switzerland and its interior, created between 1743 and 1750 is a perfect example of the Rococo style. If, like me, you always associated Switzerland with Calvinism and its abhorrence of decoration, such a structure may come as a surprise.  An interior thronging with naked putto’s holding up coats of arms whilst playing wind instruments is something you are more likely to associate with Bavaria or Austria.

And with Austria, you may not be so far off the mark.

To the right of the main altar, facing the chancel you see two kneeling figures, a man and a woman. Above it reads – obviously in Latin quote: “In this basilica lies Radebot, the first count of Habsburg and his wife Ita, the duchess of Lorraine and founder of this monastery, as well es their son Adalbert, their daughter Richeza” and several others.

As always with the Habsburgs, there is a debate whether these people were indeed buried here, whether it was Ita or Radebot’s brother Werner who had founded the monastery, whether Ita was indeed a daughter of  the duke of Lorraine and so forth. What is fact is that Radobot built a castle, known as the castle of the Hawk above the nearby city of Brugg in around 1030. Hawk, in German is Habicht and the Habichtsburg became abbreviated to Habsburg and that became the family name. Who Radobot’s father was and how he acquired his lands and castles is ultimately unknown, making him the oldest known ancestor of Europe’s most enduring dynasty.

If you leave the main church at Muri and turn left you find a small chapel dedicated to our Mother of Loreto. The cult of Loreto is based on the belief that the house where Maria was visited by the archangel Gabriel and where Jesus grew, up was transported to Loreto in Italy by angels in 1291 when the crusader state in the Holy Land had collapsed. Quickly a basilica sprung up where the modest brick building had miraculously appeared on day. Soon thousands of pilgrims came hoping for healing or forgiveness available on such a holy site. Loreto inspired dozens of replicas across Europe. I saw one in Prague this summer which I very much enjoyed. And the grand abbey of Muri did not want to miss out. In 1698 the monks built their own Holy House. Like most Loreto chapels it is divided into two rooms, the virgin’s living room with an altar at its end and then behind the altar, the holy kitchen with the holy chimney.

And if you were allowed to go behind the altar and look through the metal grille into the chimney you find two vessels. One says: CAROLI AVSTRIAE IMPERATORIS AC HVNGARIAE REGIS COR IN DEO QVJESCAT and the other ZITAE AVSTRIAE IMPERATRICIS HVNGARIAE REGINAE COR INSEPERABILITER CONIVGIS CORDI IVNGATVR. Brief translation: the first says: “The heart of Charles, Emperor of Austria and King of Hungary, may it rest in God”. And the second “The heart of Zita, Empress of Austria and Queen of Hungary, be inseparably joined to the heart of her spouse.” One heart belongs to Charles I, the last of the reigning Habsburg monarchs, who abdicated in 1918 and whose body was never allowed to return to Austria, and the other to Zita, his wife, who was put to rest in the Imperial crypt in Vienna with 145 other members of the family. Only their hearts are still together.

Two couples, marking the beginning and the end of the remarkable political career of a family that ruled half of europe and a lot more for centuries. And at the same time, two couples who were deeply rooted in their religious convictions. Two very typical Habsburg couples, connected across 900 years.

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Transcript

In the small town of Muri, about halfway between Zurich and Lucerne stands a grand baroque abbey. And when I say grand, I mean seriously grand, St. Blasien kind of grand. Its central dome is to this day the largest such structure in Switzerland and its interior, created between 1743 and 1750 is a perfect example of the Rococo style. If, like me, you always associated Switzerland with Calvinism and its abhorrence of decoration, such a structure may come as a surprise.  An interior thronging with naked putto’s holding up coats of arms whilst playing wind instruments is something you are more likely to associate with Bavaria or Austria.

And with Austria, you may not be so far off the mark.

To the right of the main altar, facing the chancel you see two kneeling figures, a man and a woman. Above it reads – obviously in Latin quote: “In this basilica lies Radebot, the first count of Habsburg and his wife Ita, the duchess of Lorraine and founder of this monastery, as well es their son Adalbert, their daughter Richeza” and several others.

As always with the Habsburgs, there is a debate whether these people were indeed buried here, whether it was Ita or Radebot’s brother Werner who had founded the monastery, whether Ita was indeed a daughter of  the duke of Lorraine and so forth. What is fact is that Radobot built a castle, known as the castle of the Hawk above the nearby city of Brugg in around 1030. Hawk, in German is Habicht and the Habichtsburg became abbreviated to Habsburg and that became the family name. Who Radobot’s father was and how he acquired his lands and castles is ultimately unknown, making him the oldest known ancestor of Europe’s most enduring dynasty.

If you leave the main church at Muri and turn left you find a small chapel dedicated to our Mother of Loreto. The cult of Loreto is based on the belief that the house where Maria was visited by the archangel Gabriel and where Jesus grew, up was transported to Loreto in Italy by angels in 1291 when the crusader state in the Holy Land had collapsed. Quickly a basilica sprung up where the modest brick building had miraculously appeared on day. Soon thousands of pilgrims came hoping for healing or forgiveness available on such a holy site. Loreto inspired dozens of replicas across Europe. I saw one in Prague this summer which I very much enjoyed. And the grand abbey of Muri did not want to miss out. In 1698 the monks built their own Holy House. Like most Loreto chapels it is divided into two rooms, the virgin’s living room with an altar at its end and then behind the altar, the holy kitchen with the holy chimney.

And if you were allowed to go behind the altar and look through the metal grille into the chimney you find two vessels. One says: CAROLI AVSTRIAE IMPERATORIS AC HVNGARIAE REGIS COR IN DEO QVJESCAT and the other ZITAE AVSTRIAE IMPERATRICIS HVNGARIAE REGINAE COR INSEPERABILITER CONIVGIS CORDI IVNGATVR. Brief translation: the first says: “The heart of Charles, Emperor of Austria and King of Hungary, may it rest in God”. And the second “The heart of Zita, Empress of Austria and Queen of Hungary, be inseparably joined to the heart of her spouse.” One heart belongs to Charles I, the last of the reigning Habsburg monarchs, who abdicated in 1918 and whose body was never allowed to return to Austria, and the other to Zita, his wife, who was put to rest in the Imperial crypt in Vienna with 145 other members of the family. Only their hearts are still together.

Two couples, marking the beginning and the end of the remarkable political career of a family that ruled half of europe and a lot more for centuries. And at the same time, two couples who were deeply rooted in their religious convictions. Two very typical Habsburg couples, connected across 900 years.

The Habsburgs make their first appearance at the top table of the European political scene more than 200 years after Radebot and Ita had founded or had not founded the great abbey at Muri. One of their descendants, Rudolf von Habsburg was elected King of the Romans in 1273. Later on Habsburg mythology will describe him as a poor count who rose to kingship on the back of merit and Christian humility. It is said that he once handed over his horse to a priest so that he could reach the dying in time for the last sacrament, an act of enormous generosity since a fully trained warhorse cost a fortune and not every priest could be trusted to bring such a valuable item back. And Rudolf, we are told, could not afford such generosity. He was a man of modest means whose simple coat drew the derision of the imperial princes draped in robes made from cloth of gold.

But these are just tales, tales told to emphasize the family’s piety and sobriety, manufactured in the great PR machine they kept humming along from their earliest days. In reality the Habsburgs were very rich, rich enough to be amongst the most significant backers of the Hohenstaufen emperor Frederick II when he cut is way to the imperial throne in 1212. Radebot’s descendants had gained significant territories in Alsace, the Breisgau and what is today German speaking Switzerland through the usual combination of ruthlessness, smart political maneuvering and fecundity. But what had turbocharged their wealth was a bridge. This bridge across the Schöllenen Gorge was built around 1230 and opened up the Gotthard pass, then and now one of the most important and shortest Alpine crossings. The Habsburgs controlled several of the cities at the foot of the mountain, including Lucerne, and acted as vicars over the Swiss cantons of Uri, Schwyz and Nidwalden which covered the northern side of the pass. Tolls from this road allowed the family to fund further conquests across the former duchy of Swabia and the kingdom of Burgundy.

Rudolf came into his inheritance when he was 22. Though the Hohenstaufen emperor Frederick II is still around, the whole structure is coming apart. Popes and emperors were at daggers drawn. In 1246 an antiking was elected and imperial power was fading away. This was the Interregnum and it was dog eat dog time.

Inheritances that in the past would have gone to the crown to be enfeoffed to a loyal vassal of the emperor, were now divided up amongst the most aggressive of their relatives. And Rudolf was very good and very lucky at that particular game. He did benefit from the unusual fecundity of his family which had placed sons and daughters into the bloodlines of practically anyone who was anyone in the south west of the empire. Which meant that when other families, less blessed with powerful loins, expired, there was always a Habsburg claim in the mix. During his career as a serial heir, several important families were dying out or weakened. One was a lateral branch of the Habsburgs whose possessions he managed to consolidate. The Lenzburgs, then the Kiburgs and finally the mighty dukes of Zaehringen disappeared from natural causes. Whenever that happened, Rudolf of Habsburg was there, holding the marriage contract in on hand and the sword in the other, demanding his share of the spoils, until he had become the most powerful lord in Swabia.

This kind of life is one of perennial warfare. The annals of Basel record that in 1268 he conquered Utzenberg and some other castles, in 1269 he takes Reichenstein, in 1270 he besieges the city of Basel for 3 days, in 1271 he burns down the monastery at Granfelden and several villages and that same year he also destroys the castle at Tiefenstein, in 1272 he goes after Freiburg and destroys the surroundings of the city, and so forth and so forth.

Bishops were sort of a speciality of his. He made his name in a feud against the bishop of Strasburg who had refused to hand over another one of these inheritances. His retaliation was relentless. He did not stop until he had the bishop stripped of all his strongholds and cities, including Strasburg itself.

Once the bishop had been replaced and his successor had recognised Rudolf’s victory, all Rudolf asked for was his original demand. The cities and strongholds he handed back, allegedly without even asking for a ransom payment. According to the chronicler he did this to turn a foe into a friend and ally.

That kind of behaviour was extremely unusual in the Middle Ages. And it hints at a more general observation – that Rudolf was a strategic thinker well ahead of his time.  Outwardly he was warm and affable. But his engaging friendliness and outward humility covered a steely determination to win, and to win at all cost. Conventions of chivalry that ruled the behaviour of Europe’s elites to him were just that, conventions, guidelines to be observed in normal times but that could be broken if the occasion demanded it.

Rudolf von Habsburg was a very competent war entrepreneur and politician and quite wealthy. But that does not make you a candidate for the throne of the Holy Roman Empire. There were dozens of such counts around and more importantly, there were the imperial princes who sported lineages that included kings and emperors going all the way back to Charlemagne or even Clovis. Compared to that Rudolf’ descent from count Radebot made him distinctly nouveau riche.

Making Rudolf King of the Romans was an unusual choice, and such an unusual choice required an unusual set of circumstances.

For 23 years there had been no effective King of the Romans, let alone emperor. Instead there were two competing claimants, neither of whom spent much or any time in the Reich. This -amongst other things – prevented the largest and most populous state in Europe from providing meaningful assistance to the rapidly disappearing kingdom of Jerusalem. Hence the papacy – which had created this chaos in the first place – now demanded that a proactive new emperor was elected, who could then make his way to Jerusalem forthwith.

There was no shortage of proactive men with vast fortunes in gold and men willing to take up the burden of kingship. But the wealth in men and material was also their problem. The most eminent imperial princes, like the duke of Bavaria, the count palatine on the Rhine, the landgrave of Thuringia and the duke of Saxony were all keen. But they realized that for one reason or another they might not get the vote. So they could live with someone else becoming king, but only as long as that someone wasn’t one of their peers. And there was one they definitely would not allow to sit the throne of Charlemagne, and that was the richest of the princes, king Ottokar II the Golden King of Bohemia. Electing him would lead to a strengthening of imperial power, which in turn meant a loss of their freedoms.

And the other thing they did not want to lose were the lands they had pilfered from the now defunct Hohenstaufen family. Some of these had been personal property of the emperors, which could be taken on the basis of descent from some second cousin twice removed. But the crown lands were a different kettle of fish. These were technically unalienable and would have to be handed back should the new emperor have enough power to force their return.

These were the unusual circumstances that turned a gruff old warrior from Swabia into a perfect gracious lord.

Rudolf was a rich count but still a fraction as powerful as any of the great imperial prices. He at least pretended to be a godson of the Hohenstaufen emperor Frederick II, bringing him the votes of those yearning for a return of the good old days.  And at the same time he had been one of the most rapacious plunderers of the Hohenstaufen inheritance, making him acceptable to the other princes who were reluctant to disgorge the properties they had stolen from the royal purse. And he was a pious man with a track record as a crusader. Best of all, he was 55 years old, so should not be around for much longer.

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In a truly astounding twist of fate, the man who brokered the deal that led to Rudolfs elevation, was Friedrichof Hohenzollern, ancestor of the kings of Prussia who worked so hard to erode Habsburg power in the 18th and 19th century.

Surprise, surprise, Rudolf turned out to be the exact opposite of what the electors wanted. Not only did he have the temerity to live for almost another 20 years, he used this time to rebuild the financial and political infrastructure of the imperial crown. He appointed powerful local aristocrats as vogts or imperial vicars in the regions and tasked them with recapturing the crown lands. Peter Wilson estimates that Rudolf managed to bring 2/3rds of the Hohenstaufen lands back under royal control.

Rebuilding the royal demesne was however not Rudolf’s most momentous achievement.  That was a bit more self-serving. Rudolf managed to secure the duchies of Austria and Styria for his family, to which his successors would later add Carinthia and Carniola, the nucleus of the Habsburg empire.

When Rudolf ascended the throne, these duchies had been held by king Ottokar of Bohemia for over 20 years and he had the pieces of paper to prove it. If Ottokar had done the right thing and just smiled and waved, the Habsburg would never had a chance. But smile and wave was not his way.

The Bohemian king literally owned a gold mine and had acquired a huge territory that stretched from Bohemia to the Mediterranean. He was so rich and powerful, he thought, he should have become king. But that was exactly the reason the imperial princes did not want him to be king. He did not understand. How could they prefer this poor count over him, the Golden King  whose great deeds of chivalry outshone his rival’s petty squabbles on the Upper Rhine. Ottokar was sulking. When he was invited to come to Rudolf’s first imperial diet, he refused to come and certainly would not swear allegiance to the new king.

Rudolf – the smart politician he was – twisted that not as disrespecting him, but as an insult to the empire and to all the grand princes who had elected him. He raised an imperial army amongst the princes and without encountering much resistance threw Ottokar out of Austria.

Being king, he could now enfeoff his sons with the duchies of Austria and Styria, whilst Carinthia and Carniola were given to his son in law. And with that began the 650-year long rule of the Habsburgs in Austria.

Once Rudolf had added and then defended Austria against Ottokar’s attempt at revenge, the Habsburgs had become imperial princes and one of the most powerful families. But that was only step one.

Rudolf’s political plan from then on out was to create a new imperial dynasty, replicating the Hohenstaufen, or even the Salians or Ottonians. But that is where he hit a snag. The response from the Pope and from the imperial princes was clear: dream on mate. The very last thing anyone, well apart from Rudolf obviously, wanted, was a powerful emperor who could balance out the papacy and force the imperial princes back into submission. So the pope denied him the coronation as emperor and the princes an election of his son as king and successor.

Instead, when Rudolf died, they elected another “minor count”, Adolf von Nassau. Nassau tried the same trick and made a play for the Landgraviate of Thuringia which ended in a disastrous war that sucked in one prince after another. This made things so uncomfortable that the electors turned to the only imperial prince rich and powerful enough to rid them of the pesky Adolf von Nassau, and that prince was Albrecht von Habsburg, Rudolf’s son and heir. So they reluctantly deposed Adolf and elevated Albrecht, who promptly did the honors and killed Adolf – most honorably in a battle obviously.

Now that the Habsburgs were back in play, the apotheosis of the new dynasty was written high up in the skies. And initially everything was going swimmingly.

We are hitting one of those points in European history where feeble loins destroy kingdoms and let new empires emerge. Over the course of a few years, Austria’s neighbors, the kingdoms of Bohemia and Hungary lost their original royal families. Hungary in 1301 and Bohemia in 1306. From that point onwards these lands oscillated between short periods of glorious victories and long periods as pawns in European politics.

Given the strategic position of Austria, bordering both Hungary and Bohemia, and being geographically, demographically and financially weaker than either of them, the Habsburgs were from the getgo hugely interested in these lands. Which is why Albrecht I made a bid for both Bohemia and Hungary when their thrones became vacant.

But these efforts experienced a major setback. In April 1308 Albrecht was mustering an army in Swabia to have another go at Prague. But he never got there. At a dinner his nephew John had asked for the n-th time whether he would at some point receive the inheritance his uncle so kindly managed on his behalf. Apparently John was not happy with the response, since when Albrecht ended the dinner by handing out floral wreaths to his guests, John threw the table decorations in the face of the king and said, he was tired of being fobbed off with worthless baubles.

The next day, the first of May 1308, the king was riding back to his ancestral home on the Castle of the Hawk accompanied by only one attendant. That was when his nephew John and four co-conspirators appeared. John raised his sword and brought it down on the royal skull, making him John Parricida, John the Murderer and bringing him a life on the run. What it also brought down were the Habsburg’s chances to create a new dynasty of Holy Roman Emperors for another 200 years.

The imperial princes were in no mood to elect another Habsburg. They quite rightly feared that the next one would use his elevated position as leverage into Bohemia and/or Hungary, at which point the dynasty would become permanent. They would be even more powerful that Ottokar II had been. Hence they sought out another poor count, Henry of Luxemburg as king, later emperor Henry VII. Henry did them two favors, one was to disappear down to Italy in a madcap attempt at reliving the heyday of the Hohenstaufen, and, much closer to home, by furnishing the Bohemians with a new king who wasn’t a Habsburg.

When Henry VII died in 1313, the Habsburgs had another go at the imperial crown. This ended up in a split election between Friedrich the Handsome, the son of Albrecht I, and a Wittelsbach, Ludwig the Bavarian. The Habsburgs lost the war of succession. Still Ludwig elevated his cousin Friedrich the Handsome to co-king as a way to pacify the empire. Friedrich, despite his formal title, did not gain much influence and shuffled off his mortal coil in 1330. Friedrich the Handsome, was so insignificant, he is not even counted in the list of Kings of the Romans. And he turned out to be the last Habsburg on the throne for a 100 years.

Friedrich’s successor as head of the House of Habsburg was his brother Albrecht, called “the Wise”. That sounds promising!

And it was. Albrecht was somewhat unusual for a Habsburg in as much as he had originally been destined for the church. The Habsburgs were almost all extremely, if not fanatically pious. That however did not compel them to give up potential spares to the church. Right from the start a big part of the Habsburg success lay in placing their sons and daughters into promising positions to inherit even more territory.

Maybe there was an opening here since Albrecht was the fifth son of King Albrecht I and he had a younger brother, Otto, bringing the total to six. But against all the odds, his elder brothers all passed away, the last, King Friedrich the Handsome in 1330 as we just heard. All these guys had been fit and healthy, one of them seemingly even handsome. Albrecht was none of the above. He suffered from terrible arthritis that left him in almost constant pain, unable to walk, let alone ride. Nevertheless he was regarded as one of the most successful early Habsburgs.

Albrecht gave up on the ambitions of his elder brothers and submitted to emperor Ludwig the Bavarian properly. And he was amply rewarded for this. In 1335 emperor Ludwig the Bavarian enfeoffed Albrecht with Carinthia and Carniola, setting aside the claims of the previous duke’s daughter, the famous Margarete Maultasch. I did a whole episode about her remarkable life, so I will not go on about the shenanigans that went on there again.

The rest of his near 25 year old rule was taken up with consolidating his power within the duchies and scheming to deprive Margarete Maultasch of her other, much richer possession, the county of Tyrol. It is during this period that the family is shifting its focus away from their ancestral homeland in the duchy of Swabia to their new territories in Austria, Styria, Carinthia and Carniola. The Habsburgs moved into the Hofburg in Vienna and became Austrian.

But still this otherwise so sedate and sensible reign was built on feet of clay. By 1338, Albrecht and his wife Joan had five sons in 15 years of marriage, but none of them survived childhood. His younger brother Otto  had now died as well, followed by Otto’s two teenage sons. And none of his elder brothers had ever produced a son that lived.

The House of Habsburg, famed for its fecundity, was about to expire. And if it had, fierce wars of succession between the Wittelsbachs and Luxemburgs would have destroyed the land. It goes to show how fragile these dynasties were, when the six sons of Albrecht I, each one married and attempting to procreate could find themselves out of heirs within a generation. And if Albert II had not undertaken a pilgrimage to Aachen, and the lord’s swaddling clothes had not done their thing, the Habsburgs would have ended up as just a footnote in history.

But the miracle happened and Joan gave birth to a son, Rudolf in November 1339, and then three more, Friedrich in 1347, Albrecht in 1349 and Leopold in 1351.  And talking about miracles, at the birth of Leopold, she was 51 years old.

These three boys, minus Friedrich who succumbed to a riding accident, continued the line of the family. And not just that. Rudolf, the eldest, would go on to forge the ideological and political foundations of the casa di Austria that would go on to rule the world. But that is something we will look into next week.

And before I go, just a big thank you to all of you who are supporting the show. Your encouragement in all its forms, not just financial, is what keeps this podcast going. So from next week I will again name individual patrons. If you are a patron or want to become a patron, go to my website, historyofthegermans.com/support and sign up there. And let me know If you wish to have your full name read out to be there for eternity, or if you prefer just first name and initial.

Last thing, if you want to go into more detail on the things I mentioned in this episode or hear them in a different context, go to the episode website – the link is in the show notes. I have included hyperlinks to previous episodes where we discussed these topics, namely episodes 138 to 143 about Rudolf I and Albrecht I, 150 about Friedrich the Handsome and 152 about Margarete Maultasch.

And with that, saddle up and lets get going with the Fall and Rise of the House of Habsburg.

Henry VII’s journey to Rome

In the winter of 1310 the emperor elect Henry VII not yet 40 years of age and every inch a king appears in Italy. An Italy torn apart by incessant violence, between and within the cities. Allegedly it is a struggle between the pro-imperial Ghibellines and the pro-papal Guelphs, but 60 years after the last emperor had set foot on Italian soil and seven years after the pope has left for Avignon, these designations have become just names without meaning, monikers hiding the naked ambitions of the powerful families.

The poet Dante Aligheri projects the hopes of many desperate exiles on Henry when he prays that “we, who for so long have passed our nights in the desert, shall behold the gladness for which we have longed, for Titan shall arise pacific, and justice, which had languished without sunshine at the end of the winter’s solstice, shall grow green once more”.

A lot to get done for our Luxemburg count and his army of 5,000 men. Certainty of death, small chance of success, what are we waiting for?

TRANSCRIPT

Hello and Welcome to the History of the Germans: Episode 146 – The Return of the King – Henry VII’s journey to Rome

In the winter of 1310 the emperor elect Henry VII not yet 40 years of age and every inch a king appears in Italy. An Italy torn apart by incessant violence, between and within the cities. Allegedly it is a struggle between the pro-imperial Ghibellines and the pro-papal Guelphs, but 60 years after the last emperor had set foot on Italian soil and seven years after the pope has left for Avignon, these designations have become just names without meaning, monikers hiding the naked ambitions of the powerful families.

The poet Dante Aligheri projects the hopes of many desperate exiles on Henry when he prays that “we, who for so long have passed our nights in the desert, shall behold the gladness for which we have longed, for Titan shall arise pacific, and justice, which had languished without sunshine at the end of the winter’s solstice, shall grow green once more”.

A lot to get done for our Luxemburg count and his army of 5,000 men. Certainty of death, small chance of success, what are we waiting for?

But before we start let me remind you that the History of the Germans Podcast is advertising free, thanks to the generosity of our patrons who have signed up on patreon.com/historyofthegermans or on historyofthegermans.com/support.

And this week, as promised,  I would like to highlight some of you who have been so kind to promote the show these last few weeks. And that list starts with syrom whose article on Medium about the intersection of history and AI has been hugely interesting and brought so far a staggering 68 new listeners. You can find a link in the show notes. I would also like to thank Zeta of 1, SomeDude, Bloke in North Dorset, Tom Broekel, Mark Greenwald, Gerco Wolfswinkel and Michael P. Borneman for their relentless support on Twitter/X and elsewhere. And on Facebook, the list is even longer so I may miss some people, but let me thank Kent Lindahl, Katherina Russell-Head, Michael Cuffaru, Eric Andersen, Piotr Kaczmarczyk, Simon Wilde and the incredibly generous Nina Bugge-Rigault. Thank you all so much!

Now, back to the show.

Last week we left Henry VII, still only King of the Romans, in Turin, home of his brother in law, Count Amadeus of Savoy. With him is an army of about 5,000 men recruited amongst his friends and family from the western side of the empire. There are his two brothers, Balduin, the young archbishop of Trier and the great chivalric knight Walram, now count of Luxemburg.  Of the Prince Electors and other great imperial princes only Leopold, duke of Austria has come along.

A modest force, but by no means the smallest ever for a medieval emperor elect.

Two things were supposed to smooth his way down to Rome.

For one, pope Clement VII, the first pope to have left Rome for good and now residing in Poitiers under the watchful eye of the king of France, in an act of defiance, had promised Henry VII to personally crown him in Rome on February 2, 1312 .

And secondly, the citizens of Italy were tired of the perennial strife between and inside the cities, a struggle often described as the fight between the Guelphs and the Ghibellines. News of the arrival of Herny VII in Italy were greeted with great enthusiasm by many. The great poet Dante, at that point a political exile from his hometown of Florence wrote: “Rejoice, therefore, O Italy, thou that art now an object of pity even to the Saracens, for soon shalt thou be the envy of the whole world, seeing that thy bridegroom , the comfort of the nations, and the glory of thy people, the most clement Henry, Elect of God and Augustus and Caesar, is hastening to the wedding. Dry thy tears, and wipe away the stains of thy weeping, most beauteous one ; for he is at hand who shall bring thee forth from the prison of the ungodly, and shall smite the workers of iniquity with the edge of the sword, and shall destroy them.”

Such enthusiasm amongst the oppressed combined with the papal blessing put Henry into a much more attractive position than many of his predecessors had enjoyed in the past; and it presented him with three possible options.

Option 1 would be to just ride hell for leather down to Rome get crowned and get home barely touching the sides. That was the easiest options. Even cities that weren’t excited about the presence of a new emperor on Italian soil would not risk an outright war to stop someone who would be come and gone in a year. That had worked well before, for instance under Henry II, Konrad II an Henry III.

But this option would also mean abandoning any attempt at rebuilding imperial authority in Italy.

If Henry wanted to exercise power in Italy as the great Hohenstaufen had done in the past, he could step up as head of the pro-imperial Ghibelline faction, defeat the Guelphs and establish an imperial administration in each of the cities. That is option 2 and was the way Frederick Barbarossa and Frederick II had pursued their policies with to say it mildly, mixed success.

Option 3 was a new option. Henry could establish himself as the bringer of peace, as an impartial judge, neither Guelph nor Ghibelline, who reconciled the warring factions. Submitting to a just imperial ruler could work for both parties, at least in theory. The end of the incessant warfare would bring peace and prosperity to the merchants and artisans who were usually leaning on the Guelph side, whilst imperial projects in the Holy Land and eastern Europe could provide employment and excitement for the warlike Italian aristocracy who were usually supportive of Ghibelline positions.

No brownie points for guessing which option Henry VII preferred. Here is the great man himself, summarising his position; (quote)

“Has God, the supreme teacher of justice and equity, given a holier commandment than that which says: You shall love your neighbour as yourself? But is there any difference to be made between Christians?

Who is my neighbour? Is it the German, the Frenchman, the Vandal, the Swabian, the Lombard or the Tuscan? And who amongst you would like to answer: The Ghibelline? Don’t you dare!

What have I come for, what have I been sent for? That I, as a godless successor to take up the errors of all my predecessors and continue them? That I should reawaken the old divisions?

And Pope Clement, who occupies God’s throne on earth, should he have called forth our army and engraved his mark on lead so that I might subjugate the Guelphs to the Ghibellines or the Ghibellines to the Guelphs?

What has become of our justice and equality? Some have assumed names under the guise of the Empire, others under that of the Church, names which Lucifer the Fallen has given them and which can only generate hatred. I, then, who go forth as the messenger of Pope Clement and under his sign (which is why Christians look to me as to a second light of God), I am to appear here, to please some and betray others? Not so, as I declare to you loud and clear.” end quote.

What a fine speech by a such a fine man. Love thy neighbour, don’t repeat the errors of one’s predecessors and a promise not to betray those who put their faith in him. Very exciting new approach! Let’s see how that works out.

For that we need to dive a little deeper into the political situation in Italy. And if you think that the situation Germany is confusing, you ain’t seen nottin yet. I had a flick through the podcasts, books and history courses in search of a neat storyline that helps me cut through the events on the Italian peninsula between the death of Frederick II in 1250 and the arrival of Henry VII in 1310. What I found can be summarised in the words of the immortal Meryl Streep: “it’s complicated”.

We still have these city communes that had made life a misery for the Hohenstaufens.

But something has quite fundamentally changed. During the days of the Lombard League the cities were each dominated by an aristocratic oligarchy, the consuls or senators. Their structure was copied from the ancient Roman republic where most decisions about war and peace were discussed amongst the city leadership and then brought to the people for approval. These republics were incredibly warlike. If you remember episode 56 where we talked about the tiny city of Crema that resisted the huge army of Frederick Barbarossa for over a year. That is the one where Barbarossa had the prisoners from Crema tied to his siege engines to stop the defenders from shooting at the expensive equipment, but to no avail because the hostages encouraged their friends and family to rain stones and burning arrows on the attacking towers, even if that meant maiming and killing them.

During the 13th century this fierce spirit waned away in line with a change in the social structure of the cities. The merchants and artisans had become richer than the land-owning city aristocracy. Trade had kept expanding throughout the 13thand  14th century in both scope and scale.

One legacy from the crusades was a dense network of trading posts across the Mediterranean and the Black Sea run by the maritime republics of Venice, Genua and Pisa that brought luxury goods from the East to Europe. Marco Polo had returned from his travels to China and Persia in 1295.  Already in 1245 a Franciscan monk, Giovanni del Pian del Carmine had travelled to the Mongol Khan’s court as an ambassador of pope Innocent IV. The exchange with the East was not limited to knowledge and luxury goods. To feed the ever growing city states, they needed to import grain, and much of it came from what is today Ukraine, already then the bread basket of europe.

Passing goods through from the east to the west wasn’t the only source of wealth. Artisans in Italian cities produced various goods much in demand across Europe. Florentine red cloth was much en vogue as was Venetian glassware from Murano or Milanese armour.

Other than the Hanse, the Italian merchants formed larger and larger firms that set up their own offices abroad and they competed intensely with each other. They believed in a winner takes all model of capitalism, rather than the supportive network approach favoured in Northern Europe.

Production too was proto industrial in as much that for instance Florentine cloth makers would employ hundreds of workers in their workshops where production was split into multiple stages to increase productivity.

All these activities required a lot of capital. Banking began in the Italian cities well before the 12th century as crop finance. Farmers would receive a loan against their future crop which allowed them to buy seeds and feed their family until harvest. Mostly run as private operations, in 1282 the Republic of Venice opened the first state bank that accepted deposits and issued crop loans. The crusades lead to material expansion and internationalisation of banking activity that also created many of the financial tools we still use today such as bills of exchange, forwards and futures. As trade expanded, so did banking activity. Most bankers were merchants at the same time. They would fund risky ventures such as transporting a large consignment of silk to Bruges by assembling a consortium of merchants who were sharing the risk. Alongside that they may issue a loan to the junior trader who would lead the expedition. This diversification of risk and provision of finance allowed Italian merchants to expand far faster than their counterparts in the rest of europe, except for those of Flanders.

As time went by these banking houses would find themselves lending to kings, popes, emperors and their cities. These loans were extremely risky as the king, pope, emperor or city council could not be made to pay once the loan was due, as the Bardi and Peruzzi of Florence will find out to their detriment. Hence most of these loans were heavily collateralised giving the bankers the right to collect taxes, to exploit mines or other sources of income, sometimes even castles or whole territories. Interest was very high, reflecting these risks, which meant, a lucky banker ended up being a very, very rich banker.

The usual estimate is that even an average Florentine banker in 1310 had more ready cash than our friend Henry VII. Which meant they had a lot, a lot more money than the aristocrats who were ruling their city. This difference in resources caused frictions, but the bigger issue was that the consuls did not run the city in the interest of the merchants and artisans.

A merchant and artisan may be a able to defend himself if need be with a sword, but that does not mean they wanted to fight wars for war’s sake. But War for war’s sake was very much the aristocratic raison d’etre. The other flashpoint was justice. A functioning system of courts that enforced contractual obligations was a key building block in any successful economy and hence a key concern for the burghers. The city aristocrats regarded justice as a source of income from fees and bribes.

Throughout the 13th century burghers formed associations or guilds to represent their interests. And as the struggle between the aristocrats and the burghers grew fiercer the city constitutions changed. Many communes had already called people from outside as Podestas to police the city streets and issue justice since the late 12th century. But now we also find many cities appointing a Capitano del Popolo who was to represent the interest of the people, aka the merchant and artisan classes. This role became ever more powerful as the merchants became ever more wealthy. 

These two opposing groups did at some point adopt the names of Ghibellines and Guelphs. The aristocrats would usually become Ghibellines and the burghers tended to be Guelphs. The word Ghibelline refers to the castle of Waiblingen near Stuttgart which was the name of Agnes, the ancestor of the Hohenstaufen and the name they actually used when referring to their own family. So these were in principle the supporters of the emperor. The word Guelph is an Italianate form of the name Welf, the family of Henry the Lion and alleged antagonists of the Hohenstaufen. Though the name referred again to a German family, the Guelphs allegiance lay not with them, but with the pope. Bankers were particularly prone to be Guelph since the papal curia was in constant need of cash and in return appointed the Lombard and Tuscan bankers as tax collectors for the increasingly sophisticated set of church levies.

But like everything else in these convoluted times, this is not 100% the case in each city, but not a bad yardstick.

As we head into the 14th century a couple of things are happening. Unsurprisingly as the merchants and bankers get richer and richer, they gain the upper hand over the aristocratic oligarchs. More and more cities become Guelph. Most visibly in Tuscany where the hitherto modest settlement of Florence starts to dominate the region. In 1289 Florence and its Guelph allies beat the Ghibelline resistance based in Arezzo comprehensively.

But Guelph or Ghibelline became increasingly hollow slogans. The internal struggles over political allegiances turned into a competition between two dominant factions, each picking one of these names. Or in Florence where the anti-Ghibelline sentiment was strongest the main factions became the White and the Black Guelphs. White and black Guelphs goes back to a fight within the city of Pistoia between the children of the city leader from his first marriage who were older and whose hair had already turned white and the second set of children from a second marriage who were still young and sported some luscious black hair. Seemingly by 1300 hair colour was as relevant a criteria for political affiliation as support for the imperial or papal cause.

These fights for supremacy between two factions, each headed by a clan chief were as disruptive as the previous fights between aristocrats and merchants. One minor improvement was that the party which temporarily gained the upper hand would only execute a small number of their rivals and then  exile the other prominent members of the opposing faction. The reason for this leniency is pretty clear. Neither party had a distinctly different program to the other, hence cities were usually split fifty-fifty between the two factions. To be able to run the city the winning side still needed to be able to cooperate with the defeated faction and that meant they could not kill all their brothers, uncles cousins etc. The downside of this policy of casting out your opponents was that there was constantly a government in exile trying to ferment unrest inside the city and gathering support on the outside. This perennial fear of revolt forced the city rulers to spend vast amounts of money and effort to gain favours with the people. In Florence and Milan all the streets, not just the main square were paved, the courts were made impartial and staffed with professional judges trained at the great universities of Bologna and Pavia. And then there were the public works, the cathedrals and churches, the city halls and so on.

There we are. Every city in Italy experienced regular convulsions as one family was trying to overthrow the other, not to implement any particular policy, but solely to gain power. And that meant each city had a large band of exiles roaming the peninsula in search for an ally that would help them oust their opponents.

And these exiles now flocked to the court of Henry VII in their hundreds and thousands, all hoping he would bring them back into their home towns and restore them into their previous positions.

On November 11th 1310 Henry VII arrived in Asti, the then most powerful city in Piedmont. Today the city is famous for truffles, wine and its Palio a bareback horse race around the triangular piazza Vittorio Alfieri. I only found out about this delightful combination just now and Asti went straight on to my bucket list.

But in the late Middle Ages Asti’s speciality wasn’t wine or truffles, but banking and civil war. The Solari family of bankers had recently taken control of the city and expelled their rivals, the Castelli. And guess who was in the entourage of Henry VII, the Castelli.

The Castelli were Ghibellines, as were the majority of exiles that had joined Henry VII in Turin. That wasn’t because Henry VII favoured the Ghibellines, but it was simply that the Ghibellines were losing almost everywhere and hence the chances of being exiled were a lot higher for a Ghibelline than it was for a Guelph.

Asti now  became the prototype of Henry VII’s new policy of peace and reconciliation. Upon arrival he gathered the whole population of the city on the square in front of the cathedral where he received the oath of allegiance of the city council and in return confirmed the city’s ancient rights and privileges and even offered further benefices should they behave well.

But as so often with prototypes, version 1 did not work out so well. It is not clear what happened that evening, but next morning, according to the chronicler of Asti, Henry VII no longer thought this was enough. So he called the whole population back on to the market square. His right hand man, Niccolo de Buonsignori declared that the emperor was not satisfied with just the overlordship of the city. Then a cheese merchant stood up and shouted “I suggest o Lord, that you should receive the unconstrained power over the city and contado of Asti”. The imperial representative shouted back instantly, “Those of you who agree with the words of the cheesemonger shall remain standing, the rest shall sit”. That led to an instant tumult, everybody jumped up, shouting and screaming, some yes, yes, but the majority no, no. Meanwhile the imperial notary concluded quite accurately that, since hardly anyone had sat down, the motion was carried and Henry VII was now the absolute ruler of Asti and its Contado.

Happy with version 2 of his grand project of peace and reconciliation Henry appointed Niccolo de Buonsignori to be the new podesta, capitano del Popolo and just overall bossman of Asti. Niccolo then told the Castelli and Solari to kiss and make up and as punishment for their obstinacy ordered the Solari and other Guelphs to provide funds to replenish the imperial purse.

The imperial purse, smaller as an average Florentine banker’s safe, was rapidly depleting as more and more exiles raced to his banner.

Initially the Italian supporters were more or less impecunious exiles, but after Henry had taken control of Asti, a veritable snowball effect set in. The rulers of Verona, the della Scale, headed by Can Grande, which literally means Big Dog, sent an embassy extolling their long and loyal service to the empire going back to Barbarossa, but which weirdly did not include any tax payments owed under the peace of Constance of 1183. But who cares, he was a big dog and he brought some pretty big men on big horses. The Pisans, most fiercely Ghibelline since time immemorial and sworn enemy of the Guelphs in Florence sent 60,000 ducats and a few hundred knights, promising the same sum should the emperor honour them with a visit.

And then the appeal widened and several Guelph city lords appeared. The rulers of Vercelli, of Pavia and of Lodi came to submit to Henry VII. By doing so these men defied the rulers of Lombardy’s largest and most powerful city, Milan. As the chronicler Albertinus Mussatus speculated they may have done that to please the king or out of fear of their fellow citizens at home who had been enthusiastically celebrating the return of imperial splendour. And they were not the only ones. More and more Guelph leaders came to believe that joining the imperial cause was the best way to preserve their position. And with every powerful family that joined Henry VII’s army, this logic became more and more convincing.

The one who was not yet convinced was Guido della Torre, currently capitano del Popolo and all in big cheese in Milan. The della Torre were Guelphs and had swapped control of Milan with the Ghibelline Visconti family since 1259 roughly every 10 years, culminating in the execution of 53 Visconti supporters by Napoleone della Torre which was followed by the capture, torture and murder of said Napoleone by the archbishop of Milan, Ottone Visconti. In 1302 Matteo Visconti who had taken over from his uncle the archbishop and had been recognised as imperial vicar by Adolf von Nassau was ousted by Guido della Torre who could rely on support in the surrounding cities of Pavia, Lodi, Cremona, Piacenza, Novara, Brescia, Bergamo etc.

Milan was largest city in Northern Italy at the time, the city of Saint Ambrose, a great commercial cnetre and by now the overlord of most of the surrounding cities including Novara, Vercelli, Brescia as well as Monza and Pavia, the traditional coronation sites for a king of the Lombards.

When Henry VII saw the lords of Pavia, Vercelli and Lodi riding into his camp, he realised that the hold of Milan over its neighbouring cities was crumbling and he could now go for the big prize and take his beta-tested reconciliation policy to the capital of Lombardy.

Guido della Torre wanted none of this. No reconciliation, no peace and above all, no return of the hated Visconti into his city. Henry VII therefore opted for a display of strength. He took his now much enlarged force and paraded it below the walls of Milan. And very visible amongst his men were the lords of Vercelli, of Pavia and of Lodi, the cities whose rulers had brought the della Torre back into Milan 9 years earlier and who may now well be able to bring Matteo Visconti back.

Still, della Torre refused. He had begun discussions with Florence whose radical Black Guelph leadership was organising resistance against Henry VII. And there was also king Robert of Naples down south. Ever since they had wiped out the Hohenstaufen the kings of Naples had become the dominant power on the peninsula and the leaders of the Guelphs. Their tentacles reached well into Lombardy and Piedmont where Asti ad Alessandria had once sworn allegiance to the Anjou. King Robert was also papal vicar in Romagna and Tuscany and Florence had once made him their Podesta. And Robert was a cousin of King Philipp IV of France who was increasingly concerned about the shenanigans his former vassal was getting himself into down there in Italy.

But time was pressing. Henry’s army was now camped out in Vercelli, a day and half’s ride from Milan. And worse Guido’s nephew, the archbishop of Milan hated him, hated him a lot and for good reason. Guido had his father thrown in jail to rot for fear of competition. The archbishop and the Visconti were gathering support inside the city of Milan whilst the lords of Pavia, Vercelli and Lodi worked on the remaining loyal cities of Brescia, Cremona, Como etc.

The standoff lasted 30 days. Guido hoped for reinforcement to come from Tuscany and the other Lombard cities, whilst Henry hoped that Guido’s regime would simply collapse under the external and internal pressures.

Finally time ran out for Henry. He needed to make a move if not because he was running out of cash. He took his army from Vercelli west of Milan and marched it towards Pavia which is just south of the great city. Della Torre thought his lucky day had come and the dreaded imperial force would head south to Rome, never to be heard of again. But at the last minute, Henry turned his forces east and marched towards Milan. Della Torre knew that the citizens weren’t prepared to fight a long and painful siege and his enemies inside would find a way to open the gates to the imperial army. He caved and invited Henry VII into the city and accepted the king as his rightful lord.

The conquest of Milan turned the snowball into an avalanche. One city after another swore allegiance to Henry. Brescia, Cremona, Bergamo, Vicenza, Padua as well as the communes of the Emilia Romagna came to hand over the keys to their cities and to receive a new governor chosen by Henry VII. Only the Tuscan allies of Florence and Bologna, largest of the cities in the Romagna refused and instead fortified their walls. Alessandria down in Piedmont also failed to send a delegation as it was occupied by a garrison of king Robert of Naples who is now going from being mildly concerned about the count of Luxemburg playing emperor up in savoy to full on panic stations.

Meanwhile Henry VII went from strength to strength. His entrance into Milan turned into a triumph. Accompanied by Guido della Torre, Matteo Visconti and the archbishop, three men who hated each other from the bottoms of their hearts and whose rivalry had brought untold misery to the population of Milan were now riding side by side guiding the future emperor, the bringer of peace and prosperity into Italy’s foremost city. 

To literally crown his success Henry VII planned the next act in this drama, emulating the great Charlemagne and many of his Ottonian, Salian and Hohenstaufen predecessors by putting  the iron crown of the Lombards on his head.

He invited all the important families of Italy to come to the church of St. Ambrogio, the venerable house of St. Ambrose on January 6, the festival of Epiphany, 1311 to witness his coronation. Initially there was a bit of confusion since nearby Monza would have been more appropriate or Pavia on account of its early submission to imperial suzerainty. But Henry insisted on St. Ambrogio in Milan.

And so the great festivity took place before an enthusiastic crowd of princes, nobles and common people. Crowned with the iron crown of Lombardy the king and his wife rode out into the crowd on horses clad in scarlet and purple cloth, he carrying a sceptre of gold that end in the shape of a lily in his right hand.

He is every inch the king, tall, with reddish blond hair that reminds the crowds of the Merovingian and Lombard rulers of old. He wears his hair in the gallic style, short in the back as you can see with most UK teenagers today. His perfectly symmetric shoulders sit atop a strong upper body and well proportioned legs and feet. He speaks slowly and rarely, usually in French but he has some mastery of Latin as well.

His wife, albeit already 36 years of age has maintained much of the beauty she was famed for in her youth. She is blond and of pale complexion, beautiful cheekbones, the top of her nose a little reddish, the mouth small, and she seems to be perennially smiling. She gives good council, knows how to put her arguments across and is in no way haughty. Indeed some have complained that her friendliness towards the lower classes goes beyond of what was appropriate for a queen and future empress.

A near perfect royal couple that had subdued Italy in merely 3 months, not by war, but by the promise of peace and prosperity brought to you by the just, the good emperor, the new Marcus Aurelius, Constantine or even Augustus.

There was however a little kink in all this royal splendour. The crown that Henry VII carried so majestically on his graceful head was not the actual iron crown of the Lombards the one that contains a nail of the Holy cross in an iron ring on the inside. That crown was nowhere to be found. The della Torre had pawned it years ago to fund one of their endless wars against the Visconti.

So a Milanese goldsmith was made to create a gilded wreath overnight that could passably be called a crown. And like this crown, the empire that Henry VII had built was a rushed affair, an overnight success, a snowball that had turned into an avalanche. Now summer is approaching when snow turns to water, and the crown’s gilded surface flakes exposing the base metal underneath.

How that will go is what we will talk about next week. I hope you will join us again.

And just before I go, please remember that the History of the Germans is advertising free thanks to the generosity of our patrons and you can become a patron too by signing up at patreon.com/historyofthegermans or on historyofthegermans.com/support

The Luxemburgs become Kings of Bohemia

Henry, the new king of the Romans, just 30 years of age, tall and blond, every inch his forebearer the great Charlemagne had a one track mind. There was one thing he wanted and that was the imperial crown.

It is now 60 years since there last had been a crowned emperor. We had such an interregnum before, in the 10th century between the death of emperor Berengar of Friuli, yes, me neither, and the coronation of Otto the Great in 962. This, even shorter gap, had resulted in the transfers of the imperial honour from the Carolingians to the rulers of the German Lands.

It was high time to go to Rome and be crowned emperor. Otherwise more people will ask as John of Salisbury had:  Who appointed the Germans to be judges over the peoples of the earth? Who gave these brutish, unruly people the arbitrary authority to elect a ruler over the heads of the people?

But to get to Rome for a medieval imperial coronation requires more than just picking up a plane ticket. First our new Barbarossa needs to assert his position in the empire, gather followers for the journey and establish peace and justice. He needs to convince the pope to send an invitation and the king of France not to send an army to stop him. Most of all he needs to calm down the Empire sufficiently so that it does not fall into anarchy whilst he is away.

And whilst he is busy making peace between the warring factions, convincing them that all he cares about is being semper Augustus, always augmenting the empire and reassuring everyone that he is not just enriching his family as his predecessors had done, that is when he walks away with the most valuable prize of them all, the kingdom of Bohemia.

TRANSCRIPT

Hello and welcome to the History of the Germans, Season 8, Episode 145 – How to make Friends and Influence People – The Luxemburgs become Kings of Bohemia

Henry, the new king of the Romans, just 30 years of age, tall and blond, every inch his forebearer the great Charlemagne had a one track mind. There was one thing he wanted and that was the imperial crown.

It is now 60 years since there last had been a crowned emperor. We had such an interregnum before, in the 10th century between the death of emperor Berengar of Friuli, yes, me neither, and the coronation of Otto the Great in 962. This, even shorter gap, had resulted in the transfers of the imperial honour from the Carolingians to the rulers of the German Lands.

It was high time to go to Rome and be crowned emperor. Otherwise more people will ask as John of Salisbury had:  Who appointed the Germans to be judges over the peoples of the earth? Who gave these brutish, unruly people the arbitrary authority to elect a ruler over the heads of the people?

But to get to Rome for a medieval imperial coronation requires more than just picking up a plane ticket. First our new Barbarossa needs to assert his position in the empire, gather followers for the journey and establish peace and justice. He needs to convince the pope to send an invitation and the king of France not to send an army to stop him. Most of all he needs to calm down the Empire sufficiently so that it does not fall into anarchy whilst he is away.

And whilst he is busy making peace between the warring factions, convincing them that all he cares about is being semper Augustus, always augmenting the empire and reassuring everyone that he is not just enriching his family as his predecessors had done, that is when he walks away with the most valuable prize of them all, the kingdom of Bohemia.

But before we start let me remind you that the history of the Germans podcast is advertising free thanks to the generosity of our patrons. And you can become a patron too by signing up on patreon.com/historyofthegermans or by making a one-time donation at historyofthegermans.com/support. Today I want to thank Marco M., Pat S., Raphael A., Tim W., Zac D. and Maxime de Hennin who have already signed up.

Now back to the show

On November 27th 1308, the archbishops of Trier, Cologne and Mainz, the Count Palatinate on the Rhine, the Margrave of Brandenburg and the duke of Saxony as well as a great many princes of the German Lands gathered in the monastery of the Dominicans in Frankfurt. There they elected count Henry VII of Luxembourg unanimously. They praised him as “a man of peace and justice”, a warrior whose fame resonated throughout the whole of the land.  Another chronicler noted more soberly, quote “the cities were for him because he created good laws for merchants and travellers in his domain, the nobility because he was a capable warrior and had proven this in many places, especially in the fight against the Flemish”.

Upon the acclamation as King of the Romans, Semper Augustus and future emperor, the princes presented Henry VII to the people who again broke out in jubilation. The whole throng then entered the Dominican church where he was seated on the high altar. There is an illuminated manuscript produced at the court of Henry’s brother Balduin, the archbishop of Trier that depicts the scene. In that image it looks as if the new king was slotted into place by two archbishops, as if he was their puppet rather than their mighty temporal lord.

There is no mention of great festivities following the solemn inauguration, but it would be almost inconceivable that the emperor would not throw a massive banquet for the people to mark his elevation from count to successor of the great Hohenstaufen emperors. In later centuries these festivities would involve the roasting of many oxen, filled with the legendary Frankfurter sausage, though the Frankfurter made with mix of beef and pork you can get everywhere in the world is a fake invented in Vienna in 1805, which is why the Germans call that one a Wiener Würstel. This and more about the history of Frankfurt is going to be subject to a separate episode in a few weeks’ time.

Once the Oxen and the real Frankfurters had been consumed, the minstrels had downed their instruments and the last of the revellers had stumbled home, it was payday. The next few days the now King Henry VII signed one charter after another granting the various electors this or that privilege, handing over imperial lands to people he owed for his election and making solemn promises about his future behaviour.

The electors presumably took these beautifully written and properly witnessed charters and put them in the box with the same promises they had received from King Adolf von Nassau, who had disregarded them and with those from King Albrecht I von Habsburg who had disregarded them too.  And then hoped for the best.  

40 days later on January 6th 1309 saw the solemn coronation of the new king in Aachen. We do not know who, apart for the three archbishops had come to the event. There is one source that talks about 20 archbishops, 112 bishops, 20 dukes, 60 counts and 100 barons as well as countless knights who would then be invited to celebrations lasting a full 25 days.  That would have stripped Western europe of practically all its senior princes for almost a month, so sadly untrue. But still most likely another great festivity and opportunity for Henry to shake hands and reassure people of his sincere friendship and support.

The next stop on Henry’s journey was the royal city of Cologne, where he held a great diet, attended, again, by many princes of the realm, counts, knights and burghers who came to swear allegiance to the new ruler and have their rights and privileges generously confirmed.

From Cologne the journey goes to the next place of imperial significance, the cathedral city of Speyer, burial place of the kings and emperors. Again he holds court, issues judgements and grants rights and privileges.

Next his route takes him south through Alsace, to Basel, Berne, Zurich and Constance. Then north again to Nurnberg. Everywhere he goes he gladhands the local nobility, reassures the burghers  of the imperial cities of his protection and shows the generosity, the Milte of a High medieval ruler.

I guess you may have noticed already that there is something quite profoundly different in the way Henry VII is approaching his role compared to his two predecessors. Adolf and Albrecht had almost instantly sought to leverage their position into an increase in land and military resources, fully prepared for the inevitable confrontation with the princes and the electors. Henry VII takes a very different route. He looks to become a universally accepted ruler, a first amongst equals who brings peace through good judgements and reconciliation. The last time this had been attempted was by Frederick Barbarossa in the early years of his reign.

And for that strategy to work, like Barbarossa, Heny must show his vassals that he acts solely in the interest of the realm and that he most certainly will not go and seize every vacant fief for himself or his family.

Which leaves the question what Henry VII wanted to get out of his new title and powers, if not the expansion of his family’s lands inside the empire north of the Alps.

Older historians have argued that Henry VII was a romantic, naïve man who intended to emulate Barbarossa not just in his policies in the German lands, but also in his overall strategy. He was, they believed, hankering after the riches of Lombardy and so again entangling the empire in the intractable Italian affairs.

They were right at least as far as the geographical direction was concerned, he indeed wanted to go to Italy. And that he stated right from the beginning, in his first speech on the day of his coronation. All he did in the subsequent 2 years was preparing for a Romzug, a journey to Rome.

But the reasons for this move were subtly different. In Barbarossa’s days the empire’s hold on the kingdoms of Burgundy and Italy may have been tenuous, but was not really disputed by other powers. By 1309 that had changed. The French king was expanding his territory all along the western border of the empire. In particular the old kingdom of Burgundy was under constant strain. The Franche Comte, once part of the dowry of empress Beatrix was now de facto under control of Philipp the Fair’s son Charles. The king of France even sent troops into Lyon, nominally an imperial city. The kingdom of the Arelat had been on the negotiation table several times these last few decades. In Italy the Angevins, cousins of the French king held the kingdom of Naples and exerted their power north into Rome, the papal states and the Romagna.

Persistent rumours had been circulating in the empire that Henry’s predecessors had offered abandoning the right to the imperial crown in exchange for papal endorsement for the creation of a hereditary regnum Teutonicum, a kingdom of the Germans. Not much truth may have been in these stories, but they were reflected enthusiastically by writers and thinkers outside the empire. Many argued like John of Salisbury who had said: “Who appointed the Germans to be judges over the peoples of the earth? Who gave these brutish, unruly people the arbitrary authority to elect a ruler over the heads of the people? End quote.

As the empire’s power waned following the death of Frederick II such voices gained more and more strength. In particular the popes could not see the need for an emperor, now that the leadership of Christendom had so comprehensively been concentrated in the hands of the Holy Father. Pope Boniface VIII declared in 1300 that “We are emperor” and some years later pope John XXII stated that Italy had no connection to the Kingdom of the Germans.

Equally from a French perspective it became increasingly hard to understand why the most powerful monarchy in europe, a monarchy that traces its roots to Charlemagne was denied the imperial title, leaving it to the disunited people on the eastern side of the Rhine and their feeble shadow of a king.

Historic research has found no evidence that there had been any papal-French conspiracy to actually deprive the prince electors of the right to choose the future emperor, but that does not mean the Holy Roman Empire as I was, wasn’t under sever threat.

And these concerns must have weighed even more on someone like Henry VII whose homeland was on the western side of the empire and who had grown up at the French court. He had seen first hand how capable the Capetian system was in translating flimsy legal documents into tangible positions of power. And how the French monarchs were able to play the long game. This may be the second time they have failed to gain the election of one of their own as king of the Romans but how many more times can they be rebuffed. And what stops Philipp IV from picking up pope Clement V, put him on a ship and go down to Rome with him and get crowned emperor, sixty years after the last emperor had been excommunicated and deposed?

And what could the French lawyers do with the Codex Iuris of the emperor Justinian that declared the emperor to be omnipotent, his word to be law across the whole of Christendom? At a minimum, the old duchy of Lothringia and with it Henry’s homeland of Luxemburg would brought under vassalage to the French crown, no longer an imperial principality with all the freedoms and rights that entailed.

So from Henry’s perspective it was vital to get down to Rome now, not just to secure the succession of his son, as his predecessors had focused on, but for the sake of the empire, his inherited principality and his family.

So, from the first day of his reign, Henry VII planned his journey to Rome. Everything was driven by this objective.

And Henry had a couple of reasons to believe he could achieve what his predecessors had failed to do.

The first obstacle the others had encountered had been papal resistance or if not outright resistance than exaggerated demands to give up the imperial right over the Romagna or Tuscany. But in 1309 the situation was somewhat favourable.

Henry VII had met pope Clement V personally when he served at the French court. They weren’t firm friends, but on several occasions the pope had indicated to Henry’s friends and associates that he rated the young man. And we should not forget that Clement V’s lacklustre support for Charles of Valois candidacy had been one of the reasons the electors could elect Henry in the first place.

The relationship seemingly warmed and a delegation, led by count Amadeus of Savoy, the dauphin of Vienne, the count of Saarbrucken and the bishops of Chur and Basel was sent to obtain a formal invitation to come to Rome. It is telling that the people Henry sent bear names we have not heard much of in the last 100 episodes. All of them were from the kingdom of Burgundy or the western border of the empire. Their territories had gradually fallen off the radar of the emperors and been increasingly pulled into the sphere of French influence. But they were Henry VII’s neighbours and relatives, people he knew best and who could speak, not only on his behalf but also on behalf of the parts of the empire under threat of French encroachment.

Their mission prove a success. On July 26, 1309 Clement V announced that upon review of the election documents he, in consultation with his brother cardinals, recognises his most beloved son, the elected Henry to be king and that he deemed it fit and proper for him to be elevated to emperor. He would be crowning Henry in St. Peters Basilica in Rome on the day of the Purification of the Holy Virgin, February 2, 1312. He even apologised for not being able to come earlier, due to an important church council.

That was a great achievement for Henry’s embassy and a bold move by Clement V. At this point in time the French king Philip the Fair who had Clement more or less in his power had not yet made any noises as to whether he supported his former vassal’s plans to become emperor. In the days before the move of the church from Italy to France, the French-leaning popes had pretty much outright refused to crown a king of the Romans.

Clement V’s declaration is an act of defiance, an attempt of the papacy to wiggle out of the clutches of the French rulers.

As anyone who has ever been invited to a fancy party in Rome knows, getting the invite is a big thing, but then you still have to find a way to get there.

And for a future emperor getting the Ryanair flight for 29.99 excluding luggage, seating and food was not an option. A future emperor has to arrive looking like he is already an emperor. He needs an entourage, preferably a whole army, expensive gifts, crowns and a lot of bling. Henry VII had the kind of entourage, expensive gifts and bling commensurate with his position of an imperial prince, but that is not even remotely in the same league. So, from the day he received the invitation from Clement V he began collecting friends and allies willing to take the arduous journey with him. And the friends and allies would only be able to join him if they could be sure that their lands would not be attacked by Henry’s enemies whilst they were away.

So, Henry picked up his non-existent copy of “How to make Friends and Influence People” and got to work. First up, he makes friends with the Wittelsbachs, the count Palatinate and the duke of Bavaria. The Wittelsbachs were the most powerful family after the kings of Bohemia and pretty much on par with the Habsburgs. And they had tried to get one of their own in as king of the romans and had been rejected three times already. So they needed to be appeased. To that effect Henry VII offered them an alliance underpinned by a marriage proposal and a busload of cash.

Then we have the Habsburgs. The descendants of Rudolf and Albrecht had now been in possession of Austria and Styria for plus minus 30 years, but still their position was not as robust as they may have hoped. Not too long ago Adolf von Nassau had tried to dislodge them using some viable legal arguments. So Henry promised them to reconfirm their enfeoffment with the two duchies, declared the murderer Johann Parricida an outlaw, staged a splendid funeral for Albrecht I in Speyer Cathedral and threw in a couple of thousand silver coins to seal the bargain. Still things did not go quite as smoothly as hoped because some rugged peasants in the alpine valleys at the bottom of the Gotthard pass had risen up against Habsburg rule in anger – something about little boys and apples apparently. Henry VII felt compelled to grant these guys immediacy, in other words released them from the Habsburg overlordship. Surely we will never hear of these guys ever again – or probably in a few weeks in a special episode. In any event this nearly led to a breakdown in negotiations. With a bit more smoothing and finesse however, Henry managed to achieve a standstill agreement with Frederick the Handsome and his brothers. All was good there.

Then he allowed king Adolf of Nassau whose body had been dumped on a monastery near Speyer by Albrecht I to be buried with full honours in Speyer cathedral which gave him some kudos with Adolf’s admittedly small group of friends and followers.

That leaves the two largest remaining issues, Thuringia and Bohemia.

Thuringia plus the margraviate of Meissen  had been claimed first by Adolf von Nassau and then by Albrecht von Habsburg. What irritated the noble houses of the empire about that was for one the potential increase in wealth and power of whoever got hold of these at least technically very wealthy lands. But even more concerning was that these lands had been seized despite legitimate heirs to the previous prince, Albrecht the Degenerate were alive and kicking. If that precedent was to stand, the whole system of inheritable principalities was at risk. So Henry formally renounced all royal claims to the territory and signed a peace agreement with the heirs to the house of Wettin.

Now finally we get to Bohemia. You may remember that the old Slavic dynasty of the Premyslids had  died out when king Wenceslaus III had been murdered. The nobles of Bohemia had then chosen Henry of Carinthia, the brother in law of the last king to wear the crown of Saint Wenceslaus. That had brought the Habsburgs into the game. King Albrecht I as king of the Romans declared Bohemia a vacant fief and expelled Henry of Carinthia. Albrecht’s son Rudolf, he of the sensitive stomach then became king. That same Rudolf succumbed to his digestive ailment shortly after that and the ousted Henry of Carinthia returned to Bohemia. That setback did not discourage Albrecht I who was in the process of gathering an army to oust henry of Carinthia a second time when he was murdered by his nephew.

Therefore in 1308 Henry of Carinthia was sitting in Prague as king of Bohemia. Henry of Carinthia had been the only Prince elector who had not voted for Henry VII, neither in person nor by sending an ambassador. That made it awkward, but since nobody really questioned the election outcome not a serious impediment to a journey to Rome. As far as the king of the Romans was concerned, Bohemia did not pose a problem.  

But it became his problem when a delegation from the nobles of Bohemia approached him at a diet in Heilbronn in June 1309. Things in Bohemia they reported had taken a bad turn. Henry of Carinthia had locked horns with the high aristocracy and the clergy of the kingdom. As far as I understand, Bohemia was a difficult realm to run. The golden King, Ottokar II was only known by his gilded moniker outside his homeland, back in Bohemia he was known as the iron king for the harshness of his regime. And when he came under pressure from Rudolf I, the people rose up against him. Rebellion was and remained in the Bohemian blood and – as most of you probably know – will manifest at crucial moments in the history of the Holy Roman Empire, usually involving people falling out of windows. This time there were no windows involved as far as I know, but still Henry of Carinthia faced an ever mounting opposition.

The delegation from Prague had come to ask for help in preventing a civil war. Should the Carinthian be toppled by the nobles, the Habsburgs would almost certainly get involved in a Bohemian conflict, which in turn would force other princes to support Henry of Carinthia just to keep the acquisitive Habsburgs in check. And then there would not be anyone spare to come to Rome, leaving aside the issue that Henry’s prestige as the guarantor of peace and justice would vanish down the drain.

Henry was lucky enough that one of his closest advisors and supporters, the archbishop of Mainz, Peter von Aspelt had been a close advisor of the Premyslid kings of Bohemia, knew the political landscape well and commanded the respect of the parties involved.

Peter von Aspelt, Henry VII and the Bohemian representatives negotiated a deal. Henry VII would declare Bohemia a vacant fief on the grounds that Henry of Carinthia had no right to inheritance and had lost the support of the nobles and people of Bohemia. Then one of the remaining available Premyslid princesses, Elisabeth, would marry a member of the House of Luxembourg. The nobles and people of Bohemia would then elect this person as king of Bohemia, Henry would sanction the election and enfeoff him, Henry of Carinthia would be thrown out and with that the problem was solved.

In July 1310 at a diet in Frankfurt, Henry obtained the consent of the imperial princes and in particular of the Prince electors to depose Henry of Carinthia and allow Henry VII to enfeoff the kingdom to one of his relatives. At that point the person everybody had in mind for the future king of Bohemia was Walram, Henry VII’s brother, a choice the prince electors in particular could live with.

Only after the electors had consented did the Bohemians turn around and insisted that it should not be Walram, but Henry VII’s oldest son, John they wanted to marry Elisabeth and become king. The most likely reason for the switch was that John was only 14 at the time and hence more susceptible to the influence of the Bohemian magnates.

Elizabeth was brought across from Prague to marry little John in Speyer Cathedral on September 1, 1310. Henry VII set off for Rome just 20 days later, sparing but a tiny contingent of soldiers for his son’s campaign to acquire Bohemia. It fell to Peter von Aspelt and others to organise the campaign in Bohemia that would bring the House of Luxembourg one of the richest territories not just in the empire but in the whole of europe, the material basis on which their 130 year long reign over the empire was based.

Again, many historians looked at this move by Henry VII with astonishment. How could he leave this lucrative campaign in the balance for a wild adventure in the south and some imperial bling. But to me it makes perfect sense. Gaining the imperial crown was the #1 objective at this point and for good reason. Moreover, if Henry VII had gotten himself involved in the Bohemian campaign, redirecting the resources gathered for the coronation journey towards the enhancement of his family fortunes, where would that left his political position. The princes would have turned around and concluded he was no different from Adolf and Albrecht and hence would have contested the Bohemian crown. By walking away and leaving one of the Prince electors, the archbishop of Mainz no less in charge makes this look like a campaign run by the empire for the empire, not a campaign run by the emperor for his own personal benefit.

On September 20, 1310 at Colmar father and son together with their wives have a last meal. The codex Balduini shows the scene the next morning when Henry and John share a last embrace before each sets off with their respective armies to meet their respective destinies.

The army Henry VII led to Italy counted some 5,000 men. The days when all the imperial princes owed the newly elected king service on his way to Rome are long past. For this undertaking Henry has to rely heavily on friends and family. First and most prominently there are his brothers,  Balduin, the archbishop of Trier and Walram von Luxemburg and his brother in law, count Amadeus of Savoy. There were old allies from the western side of the empire, including three counts of Flanders and counts and knights from the imperial territories in Swabia and Franconia. The bishops of Augsburg, Basel, Constance, Genf, Eichstaett, Liege, Trient and Chur as well as a few abbots came along too, not only for spiritual support. Of the great imperial princes, only Leopold of Austria joins for the whole endeavour.

This army has often been described as small, and it is true that this force was smaller than the forces Barbarossa or Henry VI had taken into their wars with Milan and Sicily. But this was not meant to be a campaign of conquest. Henry VII had come upon the invitation of pope Clement V.. He had been negotiating with the Italian cities for months ahead of the trip and could expect safe passage down to Rome. The army was there to display the power of the new emperor and to break the occasional resistance one had to expect in these uncertain times.

The army travels via Berne, Murten and Lausanne to the pass of Mont Cenis. From there they descend into Piedmont and arrive in Count Amadeus of Savoy’s capital, the city of Turin in the first week of November 1310. News of the arrival of an emperor spreads like wildfire.

Dante Aligheri writes a letter calling him “the comfort of the nations, and the glory of thy people”. He was not alone in hoping that finally after 60 years a prince of peace returns to Italian soil, a land riven with divisions, caught in a near perennial civil war between Guelphs and Ghibellines, a land abandoned by the papacy.

From all we heard so far, our hero, Henry VII is the man for the job. He will sort out Italy once and for all, or will he? Find out next week when we follow Henry there and back again…   

Before I go, just remember, to sign up as a patron go to patreon.com/historyofthegermans or historyodthegermans.com/support

The election of emperor Henry VII

On November 27th, 1308 the prince electors chose Henry VII, count of Luxemburg to be their new king of the Romans and future emperor. Little did they know that this decision will give rise to a dynasty that will rule the empire for as many decades as the Ottonian, the Salian and the Hohenstaufen had. A dynasty that featured such emblems of chivalric pride as the blind king John of Bohemia, builders of cities and empires like Charles IV and finally, in a faint mirror image of the height of medieval imperial power, an emperor who engineers the deposition of three popes and the appointment of a new one, whilst foreshadowing the wars of religion by murdering the reformer Jan Hus.

Today’s episode explores the backstory of the house of Luxemburg who have been around since Carolingian times. They were the “Where is Wally“ of the rich tapestry of High Medieval History, always somewhere in the picture, but never really in the foreground. Two women feature highly, the empress Kunigunde, wife of emperor Henry II and Ermesinde, who successful ruled the county for 47 years.

But the real step up came when Henry VII, barely 30 years old and running a county much diminished after the disastrous battle of Worringen became the only viable candidate to kingship. How that happened is what we will talk about in this episode..

TRANSCRIPT

Hello and welcome to the History of the Germans: Episode 144 – The Rise of the House of Luxembourg

On November 27th, 1308 the prince electors chose Henry VII, count of Luxemburg to be their new king of the Romans and future emperor. Little did they know that this decision will give rise to a dynasty that will rule the empire for as many decades as the Ottonian, the Salian and the Hohenstaufen had. A dynasty that featured such emblems of chivalric pride as the blind king John of Bohemia, builders of cities and empires like Charles IV and finally, in a faint mirror image of the height of medieval imperial power, an emperor who engineers the deposition of three popes and the appointment of a new one, whilst foreshadowing the wars of religion by murdering the reformer Jan Hus.

Today’s episode explores the backstory of the house of Luxemburg who have been around since Carolingian times. They were the “Where is Wally“ of the rich tapestry of High Medieval History, always somewhere in the picture, but never really in the foreground. Two women feature highly, the empress Kunigunde, wife of emperor Henry II and Ermesinde, who successful ruled the county for 47 years.

But the real step up came when Henry VII, barely 30 years old and running a county much diminished after the disastrous battle of Worringen became the only viable candidate to kingship. How that happened is what we will talk about in this episode..

But before we start let me remind you that the history of the Germans podcast is advertising free thanks to the generosity of our patrons. And you can become a patron too by signing up on patreon.com/historyofthegermans or by making a one-time donation at historyofthegermans.com/support. Today I want to thank Loredana B., Charles D.W., Jordan R., Barry L., Ryan C.L. and Jakob H., relentless supporter of the show across all social media. Thank you all.

Now, back to the show

Last week we ended with a thud, when Johann Parricida’s sword cracked open the skull of his uncle, King Albrecht I from the House of Habsburg. Albrecht I had been 53 years old, old by the standards of the time, but still two years younger than his father had been when he had become king of the Romans.

Albrecht I had not made much of an effort to ensure the succession of his eldest surviving son, Friedrich, called the handsome. That may have been because Albrecht did not expect his demise to be imminent or he did not believe he could achieve a durable succession without having received an imperial coronation.

But even if he had made an effort to secure some votes in the event of his demise, he is unlikely to have had great success. It was only 7 years ago that he had fought an outright war with the Rhenish electors, the archbishops of Cologne, Trier and Mainz and the Count Palatinate on the Rhine. Furthermore, the man currently occupying the Bohemian throne and its voting rights, Henry of Carinthia, was at war with Albrecht at the time he was murdered.

So with Friedrich the Handsome out of the running, the now usual horse trading began. Despite the rather underwhelming success rate so far, the electors were keen to again elect someone of modest financial and military means as the new king and again make him sign over all and everything he would need to be an effective ruler.

This time the pope was brought in the loop right from the outset to avoid another upset of the Roman Curia that firmly believed it was their right to determine the new emperor in waiting.

Whilst the electors, specifically the three archbishops went through the list of malleable counts, a rather unexpected party through its hat into the ring. King Philipp IV the Fair of France suggested his brother, Charles of Valois would make an excellent king of the Romans and future emperor. Philipp the Fair had tried to secure his brother a crown already twice before, in Aragon and in Byzantium but had been rebuffed. But undeterred he supported Charles’ campaign with soft words and hard cash.

If the electors did not want any of the powerful imperial princes to pick up the crown, they certainly did not want to become the satellite of the most powerful monarch in Europe. But getting out of this conundrum required a lot of skilled diplomacy. As France had gradually been expanding west as we have mentioned last episode, Philipp the Fair and his predecessor had established close links to the three archbishops whose territories were fairly close to the border.

Pope Clement V too was put on the spot by this proposal. Clement had become pope in 1305 two years after Boniface VIII had been slapped in the face and the imperial papacy had crumbled to the floor with him. He was a Frenchman and according to Giorgio Villani had become bound to king Philipp the Fair even before his election. His coronation took place in Lyon and he spent most of his time in Poitiers, very much within reach of the French monarch and his armour-clad thugs. Clement V had to agree to Philipp’s persecution of the Knight’s Templars and on many other occasions was at the French king’s back and call.

Therefore when Philipp the Fair came to Poitiers and asked him to endorse his brother’s candidature to become king of the Romans, Clement V had no choice but to issue a proclamation encouraging the electors to act unanimously and hinted at a preference for Charles of Valois. But he was reluctant to issue an outright recommendation for Charles adding even more power to the family of his jailor. By leaving out the name, Clement V signaled to the electors that their choice could be approved by the papacy even if they had chosen someone else.

That opened up room for an alternative to the Frenchman, but who could fit into that role without creating outright hostilities with France. It had to be someone who was not threatening to the electors, amenable to the pope and close enough to Philipp the Fair that he would drop his brother’s candidature.

The only recently elected archbishop of Trier, Balduin, suggested his brother, Henry, the count of Luxembourg.

On November 27th, 1308 Henry, count of Luxemburg was unanimously elected king in Frankfurt and he was crowned in Aachen on January 6. The pope acknowledged him on January 11th and with that the House of Luxemburg finally rose to the royal title.

Which gets us to the question, who is this Henry, the seventh of his name to become count of Luxemburg ,king of the Romans, and emperor and why was he the only square peg that fit into that round hole?.

Though he was “only” (in inverted commas) a count, he was a very different kind of count to count Rudolf von Habsburg and count Adolf von Nassau.

The Luxemburgs were a family that went back to the time of the Carolingians. In the year 963 a certain Siegried, a man of noble descent acquired the Lucilinburuh by way of an exchange with the imperial monastery of St. Maximin near Trier. Lucilinburuh grew over the centuries into what we know today as the city of Luxemburg, capital of the Grand Duchy of Luxemburg.

As careful listeners will remember from two episodes ago, the current grand dukes of Luxemburg are descendants of King Adolf von Nassau, Henry VII’s predecessor but one.

The medieval counts of Luxemburg were a different family and their story starts well before that. The father of Siegfried had been count palatinate of Lothringia for emperor Charles the Simple. His mother was the granddaughter of the West Francian king Louis the Stammerer. Siegried’s brother was bishop of Metz and another brother was a close friend of emperor Otto the Great.

Basically the Luxemburgers were part of the high aristocracy of the empire, cousins of anyone who was anyone on the left shore of the Rhine. In the centuries that followed the House of Luxemburg was the “Where is Wally” of the tableau of medieval imperial history. At all times there would be a member of the family somewhere in the picture, sometimes closer to the centre, sometimes a little bit removed from the imperial court, but always there. In our podcast, the so far most prominent family member to feature had been Kunigunde, daughter of the aforementioned Siegfried and the wife of emperor Henry II. Kunigunde would be made a saint in in 1199 for her excessive generosity to the church. Beyond her religious devotion, Kunigunde had also played a very active political role, including running the duchy of Bavaria for a while, before handing it over to her brother, another Henry. Bavaria did however not stay in the family as Kunigunde’s brother fell out with emperor Henry II. For details, listen to the episodes 17 to 19.

The next time a Luxemburger made it onto the pages of HotGPod was in the election of Hermann von Salm as antiking against emperor Henry IV. Hermann was a younger son of the count of Luxemburg and hence lacked the means to be a credible threat to the emperor, so vanished from the story quite quickly.

So, before 1308 the Luxemburgs had their hands in the game, but they had never really made it into the big, big league. They had been dukes of Bavaria and at some point also dukes of Lower Lothringia, but they could not hold on to these positions.

Under the Salinas and then the Hohenstaufen, the Luxemburgs withdrew from imperial high politics and focused on expanding and consolidating their princely territory. And they were pretty good at it. Their medieval principality comprised significant parts of modern day Luxemburg and their main residence, the castle of Luxemburg became a focal point for the state. 

This territorialization process had broadly two components. One was to acquire as many territories as possible from the other local powers. In the case of the Luxemburgs, this was first and foremost their immediate neighbor, the archbishop of Trier and the immensely well endowed monasteries of St. Maximin and Stavelot. The dukes of Brabant and the counts of Flanders were major players as was the archbishop of Cologne. Smaller players were the counts of Namur, Berg, Julich, Cleves, Geldern, the bishops of Liege  and I have probably forgotten a few.

The most promising opportunities arose when one of the local families died out. Since everyone was related to everyone, it was ultimately a question of who had the bigger guns.

The Luxemburgs had periods of great success followed by periods of abject failure. One of these periods of success was unusually for the time overseen by a woman, the countess Ermesinde. Ermesinde was born the daughter and only child of count Henry IV who died fairly soon after her birth. Being the heiress of a wealthy county, she was quickly married. Though she wasn’t able to rule the county in her own right, her husbands, who had the decency to die quickly left her the run of the place. Ermesinde remained in charge of the county of Luxemburg for almost 50 years and thanks to her astute policy of territorial consolidation, by the 1240s Luxemburg was though small but a very coherent entity. She established a central bureaucracy and new judicial and administrative districts. Judges and other officers became salaried officials replacing the inherited structures that prevailed to that point. She granted city rights to Luxemburg, Echternach and Thionville. And she established an advisory council of nobles that helped tie the local powerful families to the princely house.

All in, Luxemburg was well on its way to become an early modern state.

Things took a turn for the worst forty years after Ermesinde’s death at the battle of Worringen (1288). This battle had been the great showdown of all the players in the region which is today Belgium, Luxemburg and the parts of Germany east of the Rhine. War had broken out over the succession to the duchy of Limburg and the Luxemburgs had joined a coalition led by the archbishop of Cologne in the hope to get a juicy piece of this rich inheritance. As it happened, their side lost, and they lost badly. Moreover, the brunt of the blow fell on the Luxemburgs themselves. Count Henry VI and three of his brothers as well as many of his vassals perished. The heir to the county, our Henry VII, the future king of the Romans was just 9 years old when that happened. For the next six years a guardian took care of the county of Luxemburg.

Henry VII was sent to Paris to be educated at the court of king Philipp the Fair.

By the late 13th century Paris had become the cultural center of Europe. The splendor of the royal court had no rival. Just go to the Sainte Chapelle, the private chapel built by king Louis IX, to house the crown of thorns he had brought back from the Holy land and you get a sense of its magnificence and wealth.

But it wasn’t just the castles and palaces. France had become the trendsetter for chivalric culture, determining the way a noble was supposed to behave. Its chanson de Geste had a huge influence on the German Minnesang. Whilst German courts did not yet speak French, the French language was considered not quite as prestigious as Latin, but close enough.

Paris also had its university where until recently the great Thomas Aquinas had reshaped theology. The university was a truly international place. Internally the university was organized by nations, the French nation including all speakers of Romanesque languages, the English, later called the German nation that comprised the people who spoke Germanic and Slavic languages, which included the British isles and Scandinavia. The other two nations were the Picards and the Normans. Alongside the well known university colleges of the Sorbonne and d’Harcourt were the college de Navarre for students from Navarre, a Danish, three Swedish colleges and a Scottish and a German one.

French culture and the still relatively new Gothic style of architecture that had first appeared at St. Denis outside Paris was being adopted all throughout Europe, but most enthusiastically in England and Germany. Like many other German Gothic cathedrals, the Dom in Cologne was inspired by a French cathedral, in that case the cathedral of Amiens. Ironically some of Germany’s most famous  medieval artworks, the sculptures of the donors at Naumburg Cathedral and the Bamberg rider were the works of craftsmen trained in the great cathedral workshops of Reims, Amiens or Noyon.

This cultural draw of France that began in the 13th century would endure well into the 20th century. We would call that soft power today. And as today, being able to draw in the most curious and the most ambitious from far and wide and leaving them with an affinity to their host country was a substantial source of influence abroad.

Henry VII was such an ambitious and curious young man. Though he had been sent to Paris aged 9 by his guardian, he would spend large amounts of time at the court of king Philipp the Fair until his election to king of the Romans. He accompanied the French king on his campaign against the English in 1294 to 1297 and was knighted by him. On that occasion he swore allegiance to the French monarch. This oath as a vassal was repeated several times. He had also sworn allegiance to king Adolf von Nassau when he had reached adulthood. And yes, at least technically King Adolf von Nassau was an ally of the English in the war where young Henry supported the French side.

It was not unusual at this time that aristocrats swore allegiance to two masters. In particular nobles whose lands were near the border often held fiefs on either side, so owing allegiance to two different rulers. That meant that in case the two masters were at war with each other, the noble was expected to remain neutral or send troops to both lords in line with their obligations as vassals.

What surprised contemporaries and later chroniclers was that Henry VII swore an oath to defend the borders of France against all and everyone, which would have included his liege lord, the king of the Romans. A commitment that bordered on high treason.

This closeness to France cannot be explained solely by the delights of gay Parris. Henry VII as we will find was an astute politician and quite capable to see where his best opportunities lay. And those opportunities lay in Paris, not at the courts of Adolf of Nassau or Albrecht von Habsburg. For one thing he could observe at close quarters how Philipp IV operated. Using his lawyers trained in Bologna and Montpellier, Philipp absorbed one smallish territory after another on his border with the empire, moving the goalposts methodically and patiently eastwards one baronetcy at a time.  This had been the MO of the Capetian monarchs for hundreds of years now and they have become really, really good at it. As far as Henry could make out, it was only a question of time before Luxembourg would be French and in that case it was better to be close to the king of France than fighting for an empire that was coming apart at the seams.

And Philipp IV rewarded him and his family for his loyalty. First he organized his marriage to Margarete, the daughter of the duke of Brabant, the victor of the battle of Worringen. This brought peace between these long standing enemies and as far as it is known, the marriage was a happy one.

Next Philipp IV helped elevate Henry’s brother to gain the archepiscopal seat of Trier, making him one of the seven electors. It is just another sign of the rising power of the French monarchs that Philipp the Fair was able to reward one of his followers with such a crucial position in a neighboring kingdom. How was it possible? Well, Philipp had his personal pope, Clement V and Clement V exerted his influence on the cathedral chapter to choose Balduin, the brother of Henry VII. Did I mention that Balduin had studied at the university of Paris which made him a suitable candidate for an episcopal seat and that he was just 22 years old, which quite frankly should have counted against him. But age 22 does not matter when the king of France and the Pope back you up. We are clearly leaving the High Middle Ages the age of lay piety and church reform and we are heading into the Babylonian Captivity of the Church and from there into the secular papacy of the Borgias, Farneses and Della Roveres.

And now the whole thing hopefully made sense. Our key question was, how could the Prince electors and the pope dare to elect a count of extraordinary lineage but modest means to become king of the Romans, when the king of France had proposed his own brother as candidate?

Well, as long as Philipp the Fair believed that Henry VII was his man, his vassal bound to him by oath and gratitude, well that was almost as good as having one’s own brother on the throne. It was easier to let the Germans choose their leader as long as that new leader was also the king of France’s man. That was better then ramming a candidate down their throat by force who would never be accepted.

And why did the electors like Henry VII more than other counts? One is obvious, his brother Balduin liked him a lot and proposed him as an option. Henry VII’s family had fought with the archbishop of Cologne at the battle of Worringen and had paid for their loyalty in blood. That brought him the second vote.

Henry VII, despite his extended stays in France had made a name for himself as an energetic and competent territorial prince. He did conduct feuds, like all his peers, but he was a man who one could negotiate with and find a reasonable compromise. He did support commerce in his lands which brought him  a lot of support amongst the cities. In fact the city of Verdun at some point offered itself up to become part of his territories. He had made arrangements with his neighbors that should any of them be put forward as a candidate for the throne, they would all support him. That endeared him to the archbishop of Mainz who looked for support in protecting the trade on the Rhine from robber barons.

Then it was just a case of explaining briefly to the Wittelsbach Count Palatinate on the Rhine and his brother the duke of Bavaria that, again, no they would not stand a chance. The support of the Rhenish electors meant there was now a majority for count Henry. Brandenburg and Saxony who were too far north to actually really care about who was king could be convinced with the help of some generous promises. And that was enough. The current king of Bohemia, Henry of Carinthia did not cast a vote.

All in, he was the perfect, if not in fact the only viable candidate to become king of the Romans in 1308. Few of those who sponsored him were aware that by electing the count of Luxembourg, the vassal of the king of France and modestly wealthy prince, they would set in motion a sequence of events that would lead to the return of real emperors who will rule for a nearly a century and a half, building one of the most beautiful cities in the world and – like Henry III had done  at the zenith of medieval imperial power – depose three popes and choose a new one.

That sequence of events will get going next week. In the meantime, thank you all so much for your efforts in drumming up new listeners for the History of the Germans Podcast. Please keep it up and let all your friends and family, your butcher, your baker, your  candle stick maker know about the History of the Germans. Or go to Facebook @HotGPod or twitter @germanshistory and share some of my posts as a teaser.

I hope to see you again next week.

Albrecht I von Habsburg

The late 13th century was the sniper’s alley for many a powerful family. The disappearance of great dynasties, the Arpads of Hungary, the Premyslids of Bohemia, the Zaehringer, Babenbergs, the counts of Holland to name just a few wasn’t down to lack of fertility but down to violence. Murder became so common, even those who did not have swords sticking out of their chest were presumed poisoned. To save them, some were suspended from the ceiling to flush out harmful substances. Violence was not limited to temporal princes, even the pope was getting slapped down for declaring that every Christian ruler was subject to the Roman Pontiff.

The fact that Albrecht I von Habsburg the new King of the Romans is murdered is therefore not the most interesting thing about him. What is astonishing is how far this man “with only one eye and a look that made you sick” got in his ambitions. Pressured from all sides, the Prince Electors, his own vassals in Austria, the Pope, the Bohemians, still he ploughed on, picking up principalities like others picking daisies. And a wrath of daisies is what did for him in the end…

TRANSCRIPT

Hello and welcome to the History of the Germans: Episode 143 – The Murder of a King – Albrecht I von Habsburg.

The late 13th century was the sniper’s alley for many a powerful family. The disappearance of great dynasties, the Arpads of Hungary, the Premyslids of Bohemia, the Zaehringer, Babenbergs, the counts of Holland to name just a few wasn’t down to lack of fertility but down to violence. Murder became so common, even those who did not have swords sticking out of their chest were presumed poisoned. To save them, some were suspended from the ceiling to flush out harmful substances. Violence was not limited to temporal princes, even the pope was getting slapped down for declaring that every Christian ruler was subject to the Roman Pontiff.

The fact that Albrecht I von Habsburg the new King of the Romans is murdered is therefore not the most interesting thing about him. What is astonishing is how far this man “with only one eye and a look that made you sick” got in his ambitions. Pressured from all sides, the Prince Electors, his own vassals in Austria, the Pope, the Bohemians, still he ploughed on, picking up principalities like others picking daisies. And a wrath of daisies is what did for him in the end…

Before we start the story proper I want to thank not only the patrons who keep this show on the road by signing up on patreon.com/historyofthegermans or by making a one-time donation at historyofthegermans.com/support, but I want to break a lance for all of you who keep supporting the show by telling friends and family about it, by posting on social media, in particular Facebook and Twitter, or by reading and commenting on my website. A podcast like the History of the Germans experiences some serious levels of attrition. Of the 70,000 people who have listened to the first episode, only about half are still on board by episode 4 and by episode 17 that has halved again to 20,000. In the long run, less than 17% stick around.  That is about 11,000 people now. And of those an estimated 20% drop out every 6 months. That means, just to stay level, the show needs to bring in 4,000 new listeners per year, which means we need almost 30,000 people trying the History of the Germans for the first time every year. I do my very best to drum up listeners by posting on Facebook @HotgPOd and on twitter @germanshistory but I am struggling to find new audiences there. I tried the other platforms, but had little success so far. Cross-promotion with other podcasters helps a bit, but is sporadic and limited by the fact that I only recommend podcasts I listen to myself.

In other words, I need your help. If every one of you gets 3 people to try the History of the Germans, that would translate into 4,000 new permanent listeners, enough to cover the ongoing attrition.  As a special inducement, in two episodes time I will call out the five fans who send me the longest list of friends, family, acquaintances and random people of the street they have asked to listen to the show. If you do take part, let me know whether I should call out your full name or just name and initial.

Talking about calling out names, I want to say special thanks to my patrons, Larry A., Paul Caldwell, Miriam A., Matt H., Emily P and Ben S. who have already signed up on patreon.com/historyofthegermans

Now, finally, back to the show.

Last week we ended with the battle of Göllheim on July 2nd, 1298. The deposed king Adolf von Nassau was dead. Albrecht I, oldest son of king Rudolf von Habsburg was finally elected King of the Romans. 6 weeks later he was crowned in Aachen by the archbishop of Cologne.

Albrecht was supposed to become king seven years earlier, upon the death of his father, king Rudolf. But that did not happen, in part because the prince electors, the archbishops of Cologne, Mainz and Trier and the king of Bohemia, the duke of Saxony, the margrave of Brandenburg and the Count Palatinate on the Rhine had entered into a new mode of operation, where the son of a king was not to become king, full stop.

But in 1298 they had no option to deny Albrecht the crown any longer. It was either that or leaving Adolf of Nassau in charge. And Adolf had become unacceptable to the electors. Adolf had broken all the promises he had made to them in the runup to his election, promises that tied him down to be nothing but a tool in the hands of the Electors. Not only that, his successful campaigns in Thuringia and Meissen had made it likely that he too would elevate his family to become imperial princes – and where would that end.

So Albrecht became the electors champion in removing Adolf von Nassau.

Their champion he may have been, but whether they really liked, or actually supported him was a different question.

Past historians had often ascribed Albrecht’s difficulty first to be elected and then to gather support for his policies to his appearance and personality. He was described as “a boorish man with only one eye and a look that made you sick…a miser who kept his money and gave nothing to the empire, except for children of which he had many.”

He indeed had only one eye. In 1295 his physicians had taken an illness for poisoning and had suspended him upside down from the ceiling to flush out the concerning substance. As it happened, Albrecht had not been poisoned, and even more miraculously, he survived the treatment. At least most of him. The compression to the skull popped out an eyeball – so key learning from history: do not suspend yourself from the ceiling for extended periods of time unless you are certain you have been poisoned.

Apart from the loss of an eye, the time he was suspended from the ceiling had also been one of the politically most difficult periods for Albrecht. Why that was, we have to go back to his relative youth, when his father still sat on the throne.

Albrecht had become duke of Austria and Styria in 1282, initially jointly with his brother Rudolf and from 1283 on his own. Even though he was the eldest son of the reigning monarch, he pursued the same territorial strategy, many other imperial princes engaged in. His policy was to centralize ducal power. That meant removing all these special rights and privileges, the towns, cities and nobles held independently from the duke, either due to full unencumbered ownership or by grant from the emperor. And like every other prince, he faced some serious opposition to his efforts. Neither the cities, nor the nobles were prepared to hand back their hard earned rights.

The first to stand up to Albrecht were the citizens of Vienna. Hey had demanded that Albrecht confirms their ancient privileges and threatened to declare themselves as an free imperial city if he failed to do so.

Albrecht did not yield. Instead he had his soldiers close the bridges across the Danube, effectively closing the city off from trade and supply of food. The economy of Vienna took a severe hit. The artisans, blacksmiths, bowyers, locksmiths, goldsmiths, harness makers and knifemakers, saddlers, shoemakers, needle makers, butchers, bakers, furriers, tailors, wood turners, weavers, wool and loden cloth makers, parchment makers and tanners, hatters, tailers, shield makers and binders, silk spinners, tinkers and bell founders, carpenters and stonemasons, brick makers, glaziers and mirror makers, carpenters and barrel makers, belt makers and white tanners, glovemakers, producers of horn and bone goods, coin makers, stove makers and basket weavers, they all suffered from rising prices for materials and declining demand from the impoverished citizens.

As the blockade continued the price for wood and coal increased and finally food prices exploded. Hungry and losing faith in the patrician leadership, the lower classes took to the streets, demanding an end to the hardship. The local clergy negotiated a compromise. The patricians were to go and negotiate with the duke and unless they found a compromise within 6 days, the plebs would hand them over to the ducal soldiers.

There was nothing to negotiate here. Albrecht dictated the terms. He took the ancient charters and cut out all the passages he did not like with a knife and confirmed the rest. The city walls were breached at strategic points and the city returned under the now even firmer control of the duke.

Another uprising occurred in 1291/92 following king Rudolf’s death, which Albrecht was again able to put down.

A further challenge to his rule came at the election of the new king, Adolf of Nassau. King Wenceslaus II of Bohemia had been one of the electors of Adolf of Nassau. And his father had held the duchies of Austria and Styria until Albrecht’s father had ousted him from there. Wenceslaus wanted the duchies back. So, in exchange for his vote, Wenceslaus demanded that Adolf would declare the elevation of Albrecht to duke of Austria illegal and return the duchies to Wenceslaus II. Adolf’s key skill in the run-up to his election had been his ability to sign any piece of paper the electors put before him and so he committed to Wenceslaus that he would get rid of Albrecht.

Albrecht managed that latter curveball well. He met with the new king Adolf, handed over the imperial regalia Adolf needed to make his coronation valid and in exchange, Adolf suspended any action against Albrecht. But still his situation remained precarious.

The real crisis happened in 1295 during the illness that would cost him an eye. Many believed that Albrecht was at death’s door. King Adolf von Nassau thought that this was the moment to finally honor his promise to king Wenceslaus of Bohemia and ordered Austria and Styria to be returned to the crown, presumably to then pass it on to Wenceslaus II. Wenceslaus II then funded another uprising of the nobility in preparation of his return to Vienna.

But Albrecht was finally lowered from the ceiling, got into and then rose from his sickbed. He gathered his forces and put down the uprising. In his victory he was however magnanimous. He left the rebellious nobles in possession of most of their wealth and privileges in exchange for a vow of support in the now inevitable military conflict with King Adolf von Nassau.

It was this policy of stick and carrot that allowed Albrecht to remain in control of the newly acquired duchies of Austria and Styria and to finally overcome the opposition from the electors, the king of the Romans and the King of Bohemia.

So, in respect of strategy and political nous, Albrecht was very much his father’s son. I have not found a reference to him playing chess, but even if he didn’t, he was still always a few steps ahead of his adversaries. But what he lacked was Rudolf’s interpersonal skills. Contemporaries praised Rudolf’s friendliness, his affable manner and humility that camouflaged his ruthlessness. In Albrecht, his ambition and severity were very much out in the open. Maybe his lack of attractive features even before the loss of his eye had made it difficult for him to relate to others, or reports of his tight rule in Austria shaped the views of his contemporaries, but it is quite clear that nobody very much liked him. Maybe his wife liked him. She gave him 21 children, though on second thoughts, she may have had even more reason to resent him than the Austrian nobles.

But whether they liked him or not, the Austrians and other Habsburg forces did follow him in his pursuit of King Adolf that ended in his victory at Göllheim. And the Electors too got over their reservations and elected him king just before the battle.

But astute politician that he was, he did not insist on that this election made under duress and in the presence of only some of the electors was the final one. A second election took place on July 27th, 1298 now in the presence of all electors, minus the Bohemian king. Albrecht was unanimously chosen, and like his predecessor, he had signed all sorts of commitments to each of the electors promising support in lawsuits, imperial lands, money and just general compliance. And like his predecessor, he believed that paper was patient.

Who was not very patient was pope Boniface VIII back in, well not Rome, but in Anagni. The pope had to – as was now regularly the case – flee from the eternal city and established his court in the small but gorgeous town of Anagni.

These rather reduced circumstances did not stop Boniface VIII to drive the concept of the imperial papacy to its absolute zenith. In his bull Unam Sanctam he stated that quote “it is necessary for salvation that every human creature be subject to the Roman pontiff”. And that meant he yielded not just the spiritual sword, but also the temporal. Kings are to be subordinates to the Holy Father and  in fact an emperor was no longer needed.

For Boniface to depose Adolf von Nassau and elect Albrecht von Habsburg was an affront. Not that he had a particular fondness for Adolf or an animosity towards Albrecht. It was a question of rank and protocol. The electors should have first asked for papal permission before making the move. When Albrecht’s ambassadors humbly asked for confirmation of his new honor, Boniface responded quote: “I am the king of the Romans, I am Emperor”.

Albrecht, the actual King of the Roman did not have either the resources or the political capital to refute the pope’s claims. He was dependent on the pope, because only the pope could crown him emperor, and only as emperor could he get his son elected and thereby ensure the continuation of his dynasty on the imperial throne.

So, he sent another set of ambassadors asking most humbly what would appease his holiness. And the answer was simple, the whole of Tuscany. The famous inheritance of the great countess Matilda was still in dispute. And the pope thought now was the time to put this one to bed. A high price indeed.

Being bullied by the pope was only one of Albrecht’s preoccupations at this time. Albrecht was very much his father’s son and he was constantly on the lookout for opportunities to expand his and his family’s lands. And this was a time where long standing dynasties had a habit of dying out or falling apart, creating opportunities for an ambitious Habsburg to pick up some more lands.

The first opportunity was up in the far north. In 1296 Count Floris V of Holland, the son of one of the previous Kings of the Romans, William of Holland, was murdered by the nobles of his county. Floris’ support for the peasants and his opposition to the aristocracy made him a folk hero, but also a dead folk hero. His son, John died just 3 years later, aged just 15 allegedly from dysentery. The county of Holland together with Seeland and Friesland were now vacant fiefs. Instead of handing them to the closest relatives of the young count, Albrecht decided to take them all for himself.

Then there was still the whole Thuringia affair. Albrecht’s predecessor Adolf von Nassau had called in the margraviate of Meissen and had bought the Landgraviate of Thuringia from a guy aptly named Albrecht the Degenerate who had been at war with all his relatives. Albrecht had not much of a legal claim in that game, but still went for it, demanding the whole of the Wettiner lands for himself.

None of that made him popular with the electors. And he also now had to deal with a new archbishop of Trier who happened to be the brother of the deposed king Adolf of Nassau, who had died in a battle against Albrecht.

Mounting opposition from the Electors and outlandish demands from the pope meant Albrecht needed an ally. And that ally was the king Philipp the Fair of France. Abrecht had become close to the handsome Philipp at the time king Adolf of Nassau had allied with king Edward of England to attack the French. The initial, my enemy’s enemy is my friend relationship warmed further when Albrecht became king.

The two kings met on the border between their realms and agreed an alliance and Albrecht’s son Rudolf who we will call Rudolf III to distinguish him from his uncle and grandfather, was to marry Blanche, the daughter of king Philipp. Now normally the bride was to bring the dowry, but the relative power between the two monarchs meant, it was the groom’s father who had to put up the goods. The Landgraviate of upper Alsace and the county of Fribourg in modern day Switzerland were to be given to Blanche as an apanage. And the county of Burgundy, the Franche Comte was to become French. That was a major concession. The county of Burgundy had been part of the empire since the days of Konrad II and the county had become imperial land when Barbarossa married Beatrix of Burgundy. Giving this up was not exactly a way to be a Semper Augustus, an always augmentor of the realm as his title proclaimed. Moreover, a new border between France and the Empire was agreed which followed the Maas river, which again handed over some imperial territory to France.

Albrecht had brought the electors along for the negotiations to legitimise this transfer of imperial territory. But he failed to get them on board. They left the conference in protest, claiming Albrecht was throwing away imperial lands for his own purposes.

Albrecht still went ahead and ratified the treaty with or without electors.

At which point another war between king and electors was unavoidable. But this time the electors did not depose the king and elect a new challenger. As it happened, they could not muster much resistance after all. Albrecht quickly mobilised his imperial forces and most importantly the free and imperial cities who became more and more the key to royal power.

Ironically the reason the Electors could not muster much resistance was because their resources had been depleted during the fight against Adolf von Nassau that had brought Albrecht to power.

And the French alliance worked out like a dream as well.

Pope Boniface’ assertion that all power lay with the papacy and every king was to bow to him did go down like a lead balloon with king Philip the Fair of France. And other than Albrecht, he was able to do something about it. He sent 2,000 mercenaries under the command of his close advisor Guillaume de Nogent to Italy. His troops stormed the papal palace at Anagni and arrested the pope. In some accounts the mercenary commander Sciarra Colonna slapped the pope, though this is not confirmed. What is true is that the pope was made a prisoner and only came free when the citizens of Anagni put pressure on the French garrison. The French withdrew.

But Boniface VIII and the imperial church were shaken to the core. Boniface VIII died a few months later from the aftershock. A few years later the papacy moved to Avignon to spend the next century under the watchful eye of a French garrison in the opposite shore of the Rhone river.

And Boniface VIII relented on the question of the imperial succession. He confirmed Albrecht’s election and coronation as valid and promised to have him crowned, should he make it to Rome.

As it happened, that never happened.

Albrecht was instead occupied with another set of opportunities. And these were really big opportunities, far larger than the county of Holland or the margraviate of Meissen.  

The first was the kingdom of Hungary. The dynasty that had started with Arpad who led the Hungarians into the Pannonian basin in the 9th century had finally gone extinct. Royal power in Hungary had been eroded for some time and the last two kings, Ladislaus IV and Anrew III had lived a peripatetic life whilst the great noble clans controlled the kingdom. Still Hungary was a rich and historically, a hugely powerful kingdom.

Albrecht had been involved in Hungarian affairs for decades already as he captured castles and territories along the Austro-Hungarian border from rebellious nobles. In the civil war that followed the death of the last descendant of Arpad, Albrecht was initially a contender alongside the Anjou of Sicily and our old friend, Wenceslaus II, the king of Bohemia. However, he had to realize that he was unlikely to ever capture Hungary against the opposition of both of them. So he sided with the Anjou, almost certainly in the hope of being rewarded should his side ultimately win.

Whilst Hungary became less of an opportunity, another prospect appeared due to a series of freak events.

King Wenceslaus II of Bohemia has been looming large over imperial politics since the death of Rudolf I. But the empire was only one of his areas of interest. Another one was Hungary, as we have just heard. And finally there was Poland. In Poland the Piast dynasty had fragmented into a dozen duchies under a purely formal overlordship of the ruler of Krakow. Wenceslaus like his father Ottokar took a strong interest in Polish affairs. I will not even try to untangle the immensely complex political maneuvers amongst the various Piast dukes here, I did some of it in episode 134 if you are interested.

What matters here is that Wenceslaus had managed to build a dominant position inside Poland, which included the duchy of Krakow. He also married the daughter of the previous Polish king Premysl II, which allowed him to get crowned king of Poland in 1300.

He also achieved the coronation of his son, the future Wenceslaus III as king of Hungary, though he only controlled part of that country..

Still, by 1303 the power of the Bohemian ruler had become deeply uncomfortable not just for Albrecht, but also for some of the imperial princes and the Pope. Boniface declared for the house of Anjou as kings of Hungary. And even though Boniface died shortly afterwards, papal support for the Anjou as kings of Hungary remained firm.

Albrecht then attacked Wenceslaus in Moravia with Hungarian support. This campaign was unsuccessful, allegedly because the miners of Kutna Hora poisoned the water with silver dust. Still Wenceslaus II needed to open negotiations with Albrecht to break him out of the coalition with the pope and the Anjou. Albrecht entered the negotiations with excessive demands, but still ended with the return of the region around Eger, Cheb in Czech and the Pleissenland. Not exactly a crown, but not a bad addition to his bulging property portfolio.

Wenceslaus II did not see the final signing of the peace agreement. He died after a prolonged illness in June 1305.

His crowns went to his son, Wenceslaus III. Wenceslaus III immediately gave up on Hungary and focused on Poland. There he faced opposition of Wladyslaw the Elbow-High, one of the Piast dukes and the man who, together with his son Casimir III would reunite Poland. So a mighty foe.

Wenceslaus was also a sort of party prince who surrounded himself with young men of a similar disposition whilst leaving the management of the kingdom to his brother-in-law, the duke Henry of Carinthia.

And on August 4, 1306 a mystery took place. King Wenceslaus III of Bohemia and Poland was stabbed by an unknown assassin at Olomouc. The assassin was never found. And with this freak event the Premyslid dynasty that had ruled Bohemia for more than 400 years was no more.

Nobody had counted on this to happen. The Premyslid kings of Bohemia had been a huge force in imperial politics for centuries and none more so than in the time of Ottokar II and Wenceslaus II. Bohemia was an immeasurably rich and tightly run political entity. No question, whichever clan was to gain possession of it would dominate imperial politics from this point forward.

The first to seize the opportunity was a man we have not yet heard of at all. How is that possible? 143 episodes with names after names. And you tell me there is a new one? Well there is.

Henry duke of Carinthia. The reason you have not heard of him so far is that up until now, Henry of Carinthia was a sort of appendage to the Habsburgs. He was born the younger son of the counts of Tyrol who controlled the Brenner pass from their castles in Innsbruck and Meran. Henry’s  sister was married to, yes, to Albrecht I of Habsburg. And that came in very handy when in 1286 the decision about the duchy of Carinthia came up.  As you may remember, Carinthia had come under the control of Rudolf von Habsburg after his victory at Dürnkrut. Rudolf would have loved to pass Carinthia to his sons as he had done with Austria and Syria, but found strong opposition amongst the electors. So he gave it to this young guy Henry on the proviso that he would do whatever the Habsburgs wanted him to do. And that Henry did. He fought with Albrecht at Gollheim and just generally made himself useful around the house.

But then he was given the opportunity of a lifetime. He got to marry Anne, the daughter of king Wenceslaus II of Bohemia. And with it came the governorship of Bohemia on behalf of the dissolute Wenceslaus III. And then the most unlikely thing happened, Wenceslaus III was murdered by an unknown assassin.

Henry just happened to be the right man in the right place. There are no male members of the royal line left. He is married to one of the female members of the family, and he is in Prague and already in charge of the place. So the Bohemian nobles elect him to be the new king.

This royal bliss lasted only a few months though.  His brother-in-law and former friend Albrecht of Habsburg invades Bohemia, besieges Henry and he and his wife flee back to Carinthia.

Albrecht now forces the Bohemians to elect his son Rudolf III to be king of Bohemia. To add to the  rather flimsy legitimacy of his ascension, young Rudolf married the widow of old king Wenceslaus III. But things did not go smoothly. Some of the Bohemian nobles were reluctant to accept Rudolph who they called king Porridge for his sensitive digestive system. They denied him access to the silver mines of Kutna Hora and forced him into a siege. And it was at the siege that Rudolf III’s stomach finally burst and with it ended the first attempt of the Habsburgs to capture the Bohemian crown.

Henry of Carinthia was recalled and this time was better prepared to repel the subsequent attack by Albrecht I.

At that point Albrecht’s forces were stretched mightily thin. Whilst his son was trying to gain control of Bohemia, the Wettins back up in Thuringia had regained their fighting spirit and inflicted a severe defeat on Albrecht’s forces.

But Albrecht was only 53, younger than his father when he took the throne. He may not have been pretty or charming, but he has been a very successful ruler in the chaotic context of his times, ruthlessly expanding the Habsburg lands. Give him another 10 years and the Habsburgs are in charge of all territory between Strasburg, Vienna, Dresden and Frankfurt plus Holland, more territory than any of his predecessors held and containing the largest known reserves of precious metal in Europe.

But as we know Albrecht wasn’t given another 10 years. I think I did say a few episodes back that part of the success of the Habsburgs was that they would act as a unit. Everyone, not just the ruler, but all the archdukes and archduchesses were working on the great project of Habsburg power. But I also said that there were exceptions, where rivalry and mistrust blew out into violent conflict. And that is what happened on May 1st, 1308.

You remember that Albrecht had a brother called Rudolf. Rudolf was their father’s preferred son. It was Rudolf who initially was to become King of the Romans, not Albrecht. And his father had tried to make him a duke, ideally the duke of Swabia. But both projects failed, mainly since Rudolf died in 1290.

Rudolf had initially been made joint duke of Austria and Styria but in 1283 the two duchies became Albrecht’s sole possessions. And with Rudolf’s death, so did the original Habsburg Possessions in Swabia.

Now this Rudolf had a son, called Johann. Johann was born shortly before his father’s death and so by 1308 he is 18 years old. And he has neither a title nor land. His mother had been the daughter of king Ottokar II of Bohemia, so if anyone in the Habsburg family had a legitimate claim on the Bohemian crown it was Johann, not Albrecht’s son Rudolf III, he of the frail stomach.

Johann was not happy about how things were taking shape. Albrecht still had five surviving sons. That meant, there was one last cane for Johann, and that was if Albrecht would make him his Bohemian candidate, now that Rudolph III was dead.

On April 30th, 1308 Albrecht came to Winterthur in the Habsburg lands. A great banquet was held and to honor his nephew, Albrecht offered Johann a floral wrath. That tipped Johann over the edge. He was expecting a crown of silver, gold and precious stones and instead all he got was some daisies. He rose up and declared he would not be fobbed off with some flowers and ran out.

The next day, when Albrecht was on his way home he crossed the river Reuss near Windisch. There Johann and his friends attacked. Johann rode up to the king and split his head without saying a word. The murderers escaped and Johann, now known as Johann Parricida was never heard of again. He made appearances in literature, even gets to meet Wilhelm Tell in Schiller’s play, but for history he is lost.

And so is Albrecht I von Habsburg, King of the Romans. He had never become emperor, which meant he had not been able to ensure the continuation of his dynasty. the electors were free to do what they now always did, deny the succession to the son of the latest incumbent. Instead, they chose another impecunious count. Will they ever learn?

I hope you will tune in again next week.

And I also hope you can find me these three friends or family members, acquaintances or just people on the street you can turn into fans of the History of the Germans. Ideally send them to the main podcast, but if they are only interested in some parts of the story, I have sperate playlists about the Ottonians, the Hanseatic League, the Teutonic Knights and for the current series, all released as separate podcasts. The links are in the shownotes.

A Shadow of a King

After the death of Rudolf von Habsburg the electors chose another, now truly impecunious count, Adolf von Nassau to be king. They chose him over Rudolf’s son Albrecht and over the overwhelmingly most powerful prince in the empire, King Wenceslaus II of Bohemia.

This cultured and competent man became known to German history as a Schattenkönig, a shadow of a king, unable to wiggle out of his ties to the overbearing electors. Acting as mercenary in the pay of king Edward of England and failing to create his own Hausmacht in Thuringia, many history books skip over his six years on the throne.

Nevertheless, the events of his election and deposition form another crossroads in the history of the German lands that set the Holy Roman empire further down the path to become neither Holy, nor Roman nor an Empire.

TRANSCRIPT

Hello and welcome to the History of the Germans: Episode 142: Adolf von Nassau – A shadow of a King. This is also Episode 5 of Season 8: the Holy Roman Empire 1250-1356 .

After the death of Rudolf von Habsburg the electors chose another, now truly impecunious count, Adolf von Nassau to be king. They chose him over Rudolf’s son Albrecht and over the overwhelmingly most powerful prince in the empire, King Wenceslaus II of Bohemia.

This cultured and competent man became known to German history as a Schattenkönig, a shadow of a king, unable to wiggle out of his ties to the overbearing electors. Acting as mercenary in the pay of king Edward of England and failing to create his own Hausmacht in Thuringia, many history books skip over his six years on the throne.

Nevertheless, the events of his election and deposition form another crossroads in the history of the German lands that set the Holy Roman empire further down the path to become neither Holy, nor Roman nor an Empire.

Before we start I have a tip for you. If you are a fan of University Challenge, and quite frankly who would listen to 140 episodes of obscure German history and isn’t, tune in on April 8th at 8:30 GMT on BBC 2 for the final. For those of you not based in the UK, university challenge is a quiz show running since 1962 where university teams compete with each other. Many former contestants became leading intellectuals, actors and politicians. The questions are such that most people feel incredibly smug if they get 2 or three right per show.  One of your fellow listeners, Justin Lee is on the team of Imperial college and my god, he and his team are smashing it. They are now in the final. Last week Justin even got a question on Frederick II which he obviously aced. The final will be epic since their likely opponents are no slouches. Go tune in on BBC iplayer on April 8th at 8:30 GMT. If you are abroad you can watch via a VPN.  

And as always I want to give special thanks to our patrons, Mike R, Carl S., Wayne D., Katherine E. Grant M. and Bobby K. who have kindly signed up at patreon.com/historyofthegermans

Now, back to the show

On July 15th, 1291 king Rudolf I of Habsburg went on his last journey, to Speyer, the burial place of kings and emperors since the days of the great Salians, Konrad II and Henry III. One would expect that once the magnificent gravestone was placed over the mortal remains of the man who had ruled the realm for 18 years, the immediate next step would be to call the electors to Frankfurt to choose a new king.

But for months nothing happens. Finally, in November 1291, 5 moths after Rudolf’s death does the archbishop of Mainz as archchancellor in charge of elections invites the other electors to an imperial diet in Frankfurt on May 2nd, 1292.

Why did that take so long?

Since the election of Henry the Fowler in 919, the imperial crown was formally an elective monarchy, though in practice, as long as there was a son, and the son was not a minor or obviously incompetent, the son had followed the father on the throne.

And Rudolf von Habsburg had a son, Albrecht, the duke of Austria. Albrecht was born in 1255, so 36 years of age, a competent, though not particularly likeable ruler of an imperial principality. Plus he had 12 children, more than enough to ensure the continuation of the dynasty.

So by tradition, the electors should elect Albrecht von Habsburg. But they did not. We talked last week about Rudolf’s efforts to ensure Albrecht’s election during his lifetime and the unwillingness of the electors to support his candidature. Once his father had died, Albrecht seemingly tried to gain support amongst the electors. One of them, Ludwig, who was duke of Bavaria and count Palatinate on the Rhine was however the only elector he could bring over to his side. Attempts to get close to the archbishop of Cologne seemingly went nowhere

We know practically nothing about the early stages of the negotiations, so it is hard to gage whether Albrecht had made any advances to the other electors and whether they had any chance of success. The earliest documents date from the spring of 1292 when the discussion must have been going on for 6 months already.

We can get a glimpse of what the thinking of these guys was from a letter one of the electors, the duke of Saxony wrote to king Wenceslaus of Bohemia. There he pledged his vote to whoever Wenceslaus chose in exchange for 4,500 mark of silver plus a guarantee for the payment of 800 mark of silver Rudolf owed him and the support in a case he was fighting against the archbishop of Magdeburg.

But money was not everything. This was also about power. Last time the electors had elevated a man of some standing, largely because the pope insisted on having a functioning imperial ruler able to help shore up the sore remains of the kingdom of Jerusalem.

But in 1291 the city of Accre, the last outpost in the Holy Land itself had fallen to the Muslims. That was not the end of the crusades, but the crusades that followed were odd attempts on the flanks of Muslim power or in the Baltics. The great project to take Jerusalem was over. And that meant the papacy had less interest in the empire than before. Hence the electors were allowed to do as they pleased.

And what pleased them was to assert the elective nature of the royal and imperial title by denying the son the father’s crown. And this had become a lot easier thanks to the increasing formalisation of the voting process. In the past an ambitious candidate could get himself elected through tactical bribery and intelligent scheduling that kept hostiles away from the electoral diet. Konrad III did that and to a degree Frederick Barbarossa. We could even count Henry II amongst those that engineered their election.

Now these ruses no longer worked. A valid election required the votes of all seven electors, whether they were present at the diet or not. And thanks to Rudolf’s insistence, these seven were now set. So even if Albrecht would have rustled up 2 or three votes plus a smattering of minor lords and bishops the election would not be as easily accepted as Konrad III’s or Frederick Barbarossa’s. In all likelihood the other electors would have elected their own man, bringing the realm into a civil war.

From this point forward for the next roughly hundred plus years the electors will consistently deny the succession from father to son. The crown will shift between major princely families interspersed with the occasional poor count. Every time this happened, the incoming ruler will have to make far reaching concessions, pay out massive bribes and pass on more of the dwindling imperial possessions to the electors. And even that does not assure the safety of the newly acquired status. 2 of the upcoming 10 rulers will be deposed, one murdered, one killed in battle and one of them considered so poor he was known as Ruprecht “with the empty pocket”.

This strengthening of the electoral nature of the empire stands in stark contrast to the hereditary monarchies in the rest of Europe at the time. West Francia, the kingdom that would ultimately become France had started out as an elective monarchy and had remained at least formally elective until king Philipp Augustus in the 12th century.

But by the end of the 13th century the French monarchy was not just in practice but also formally hereditary, its king was given the epithet of “Most Christian King” and had achieved the status of sacred monarch, able to heal the sick purely by his touch.

Hereditary kingship incentivises the ruler to consolidate powers under the crown, rather than in the hands of his family. If a ruler can be sure that his son will become the next ruler it is sensible to seize vacant fiefs for the crown and invest in a bureaucracy that supports a centralising monarchy.

If the ruler can be sure that his son will not become king, as had been established at the election following the death of Rudolf of Habsburg, the incentive model shifts. Building up royal powers as Rudolf had done with his revindication policy did no longer make sense. All the fruits of these efforts would go to someone else, most likely one of the king’s rivals. And worse, the more powerful the role of king, the more likely the next king would go after his predecessor’s recent gains. So the rational move was to use the temporary position as ruler to expand the family fortunes, so that the clan would be powerful enough to field a candidate in a later election.

Historians in the 19th century have censored the electors for their decision to break the dynastic chain. Their actions had condemned royal power to be hollowed out further and further until the famous Voltaire quip about neither Holy, nor Roman nor an Empire had become a reality.

But is that justified. Could we have expected the electors to choose Albrecht of Habsburg as king in 1291? Should they have given the Habsburgs the opportunity to build out royal power in the Empire, first in Swabia and Franconia and then reaching out into Saxony and further North and East? Could they be expected to sacrifice their interests so that the regnum Teutonicum could go down the same path as the French and English kingdoms, just with a 100 to 200 year delay.

The French monarchy which was in an equally dire situation in the mid 11th century was allowed to build up its power base over time. The mighty dukes and counts surrounding the Ile de France did not care much about the royal title because it led so little actual power. And even if one of them had developed an interest, they were so deeply disunited, that they would have found it very difficult to agree on one amongst their own. So the kings were left alone, passing the crown from father to son and patiently building themselves up to a point where they could challenge and take down the mighty dukes and lords, one by one.

In the empire the situation was different. Royal power, weak as it was, was not irrelevant, in particular in the areas that were close to the king, in Swabia and Franconia. But even in the north and in Italy, some of the old prestige of the emperors was still there. And as we have seen with Rudolf of Habsburg, that position could be leveraged to propel a family into the rank of imperial prince. So the electors cared about who was king. And, other than the French nobles in the 11th century, they weren’t constantly at each other’s throats. They did co-ordinate their voting behaviour, often forming voting blocks going into an election.

So the electors could choose to make someone a powerful ruler which would be the best solution for the empire. But for each of them individually that wasn’t the ideal outcome. Unless one became the powerful monarch himself, the increased power of the king would come at the expense of their own position. Acting in your own interest in this situation is what economists call a prisoner’s dilemma, not a moral failing.

And so we find that from now on the choice of a powerful ruler required special circumstances, be that war and other threats, lavish bribery and firm commitment to respect the elector’s rights which in turn reduced royal power further.

In 1292 there was no threat of war or otherwise, no coercion by the pope, no overwhelming bribery. The electors could avoid choosing Albrecht.

This also explains why the electors did not choose Wenceslaus II of Bohemia to become king in 1292. When his father Ottokar was already a hugely impressive ruler, his son Wenceslaus II exceeding him. He gained his family the Polish and the Hungarian crowns, at least temproray. It was under his rule that silver was found in Kutna Hora, adding even further to the wealth of Bohemia.  We will no doubt hear more about him as we go along.

I think it is at this point that I need to correct something I said in episode 140 that the king of Bohemia was king in name only and that his title was purely honorific. Some of our Czech listeners contested this notion, some quite vehemently. I guess as always there are two perspectives on this.

If you take the perspective of the emperors and the imperial princes, they did see the Bohemian crown as a vassal of the emperor. The rulers of Bohemia were originally only awarded the title to each king individually and it wasn’t until 1198 that the title became hereditary. It was hence a title awarded to a vassal and as such could be removed in case the vassal broke his commitments, not a theoretically eternal grant by the grace of god like for instance the king of France.

If you look at it from the Czech perspective, the Bohemian ruler was his own master in his kingdom. No emperor could demand to come to Prague without being invited. Emperors did not exert influence in domestic affairs within Bohemia and the king of Bohemia could not be summoned to imperial diets unless they happened near the Bohemian border. Hence the kings of Bohemia may have regarded the vassalage relationship as a formality worth accepting in exchange for the influence on the politics of its closest and largest neighbour. And they had used the term “by the grace of god” before.

So, both of these perspectives are factually correct. When I described the fall-out of the diet in Nurnberg at 1274, I focused on the imperial perspective to highlight the audacity of Ottokar when he claimed to be an independent king, no longer bound by vassalage. I admit I should have been more nuanced on this and I will try to do better next time.

Now going back to Ottokar’s son Wenceslaus II,he not only amassed various crowns,  but also surpassed him in the world of diplomacy. As the election of Rudolf’s successor was approaching,  he had lined up two other electors, the duke of Saxony and the margrave of Brandenburg to vote in a block with him. They did not agree yet who to vote for except that they would not be voting for Albrecht of Habsburg. What makes that particularly salient was that both Wenceslaus and the duke of Saxony were married to Albrecht’s sisters and the Margrave of Brandenburg’s co-ruler was too.

So, that puts Albrecht out of the game.

What about Wenceslaus. He has three votes already, his own plus Saxony and Brandenburg. Historians argue that part of the arrangement between the three princes had been that Wenceslaus could use their votes only to elect a third party, not to elect himself. There was then also the question whether the three archbishops could be convinced to vote for Wenceslaus given his enormous wealth and power. In any event, there is no indication in the documents that Wenceslaus at any point even contemplated putting himself up for election.

If we are taking stock, we have the count Palatinate on the Rhine who is voting for Albrecht and the other three secular electors are going to vote for whoever Wenceslaus decides should be king, but not Albrecht.

At which point it is in the hands of the three archbishops to select a new king. Mainz and Cologne take the lead and they chose someone broadly linked to both their families, count Adolf of Nassau.

Adolf von Nassau was really a poor count, unlike Rudolf of Habsburg who had been a wealthy count. The county of Nassau had been divided and he was only count of Nassau-Weilburg which included the bustling metropolises of Weilburg and Idstein, all in the Taunus mountains north of Frankfurt.

Adolf wasn’t only poor and from a comital family, so definitely second division, if not regionals, which as far as the electors are concerned was great. He had also fought with the Archbishop of Cologne at the battle of Worringen we mentioned last week, so a loyal supporter of the bishops. But what qualified him beyond all other poor counts with loyalty to important churchmen was his willingness to sign practically any piece of paper any of the electors put to him.

Adolf promised the archbishop of Cologne to pay him 25,000 mark of silver, return castles and towns lost during the war of the Limburg succession, coerce the city of Cologne to do penance before the archbishop, never to let Cologne become a free imperial city, never to admit any of the archbishop’s enemies or their representative to his council etc., etc., pp. Similar arrangements were signed with the archbishop of Mainz who was given two cities in Thuringia, the representatives of the king of Bohemia received the imperial lands around Eger and Pleissen as well as the promise of a favourable decision should Wenceslaus claim the return of Austria, Styria and Carinthia from the Habsburgs and so on and so on.

The electors had their perfect king. Tied down by arrangements, all safeguarded by collateral, that meant he could barely go to the outhouse with a written permit from the archbishop of Cologne.

Take a wild guess why Adolf von Nassau took the job and signed all these papers. Well, he had seen how count Rudolf von Habsburg raised his family to become imperial princes and he wanted to do the same thing.

So he began a two pronged approach. On the one hand he started a diplomatic dance aimed at getting himself out of all these agreements he had signed at the start of his reign. And he was a cunning little count. He became very active in the areas a king was expected to deliver on, peace and justice. He travelled relentlessly around the parts of the kingdom accessible to him and wherever he went he heard cases as a judge and renewed the Mainzer Landfrieden. His court attracted minnesaenger and many nobles out for a good time. That gave him enough standing in the land to gradually slip out of the political ties to the archbishop. He entrusted the role of Vogt for the lower Rhine to John of Brabant, the enemy of the archbishop of Cologne. And he managed to marry his daughter to the new Count Palatinate on the Rhine who he then tied to himself through various treaties. He reconciled with Albrecht of Habsburg which meant disregarding the Bohemian king’s demands for Austria.

All that is great but does not make one an imperial prince. That opportunity arose when the House of Wettin collapsed into one of its customary internecine feuds. If you want more detail, check out episode 107 – the House of Wettin. In broad brushes, the Landgrave Albrecht, called the degenerate, had been at war with his entire family for a solid 25 years. He had fought his father, his sons, had rejected his wife, the sole surviving legitimate child of emperor Frederick II and chose to pass all his vast possessions, the margraviate of Meissen, the Landgraviate of Thuringia and the land of Pleissen to his illegitimate son. The wars that this policy engendered were vicious and destroyed the immensely wealthy Wettiner lands.

When Albrecht the Degenerate was defeated by his sons, he fled to the court of king Adolf. Adolf treated him kindly and offered to buy his rights on the Wettiner inheritance. The price, a mere 12,000 mark of silver, a ridiculous sum given that these lands included the mines of Freiberg, one of Europe’s richest sources of silver.

The reason for the discount was that Albrecht the Degenerate did not possess any of the lands he sold to Adolf. They were held by his sons, Frederick the Bitten and Diezmann. Adolf invaded at the head of a royal army in 1294 and pushed Frederick and Diezmann out.

This could have been Adolf’s great moment. The Landgraviate and the margraviate were each imperial principalities and though for the moment devastated, but inherently incredibly rich.

But it was not. There were a couple of problems.

As I mentioned, Adolf wasn’t a rich man. As king he now had the revenue from the royal domain that Rudolf had kindly assembled for him, but that was never enough to fund a military expedition into Thuringia. Nor could he count on the electors to support him in an endeavour that was exactly the kind of thing they had wanted to avoid with all these endless contracts.

The source of funds came from abroad. King Edward I of England had begun hostilities with France in alliance with Flanders and Burgundy. And he was looking for a diversion that would bind French forces whilst he attacked from the North. Adolf was to provide that diversion. The official treaty was all royal alliance and high politics, but underneath was a pretty simple deal, money for swords. Adolf had no particular reason to attack France, certainly not in the middle of his Thuringian operation. But the money came in handy and he actually never attacked the French. It all stayed hush, hush, until some clergyman found out and the pope castigated him for acting not like a king but like a mere sell sword. Things weren’t helped when it later surfaced that he had also taken money from the king of France as well, this time for not attacking.

Meanwhile in Thuringia, Adolf’s policy began to ruffle feathers with the electors. Meissen and the Pleissenland were areas that Wenceslaus of Bohemia regarded as part of his zone of influence. Like his father, he was not too keen having a king of the Romans, now augmented to imperial prince on his doorstep. The Archbishop of Mainz had important interests in Thuringia around his city of Erfurt. He also got a bit miffed when Adolf replaced him as Landvogt of Thuringia with one of his supporters.

Adolf might have got away with it had several of the electors not come together in 1297 for Wenceslaus’ much delayed coronation in Prague. This may have been where they first floated the idea, but by 1298 it went from mere chatter to serious talk about deposing the king.

The archbishop of Mainz had invited Albrecht of Habsburg to voice some grievances he had against Adolf in front of the electors. Though this meeting in Frankfurt did not happen as such, a month later the archbishop plus the duke of saxony and the margraves of Brandenburg got together to open a case against the king. Mainz soon after received authorisation from Cologne and Bohemia to act on their behalf and even the count palatinate, son in law of Adolf joined in.

Once opened and the legitimacy of the court established, the result was a foregone conclusion. Adolf was convicted for breaking the peace, breach of the agreements made at his election, the extraction of funds from the church and for good measure, desecration of the Host.

Upon conviction Adolf was deposed and replaced with – drumroll- Albrecht von Habsburg.

This time a impecunious count was not an option. Adolf von Nassau was not going to lay down his crown without a fight. And he was in charge if an army. The electors needed to select someone who could lead forces against Adolf and win. And that man was Albrecht von Habsburg.

Albrecht had already been fighting Adolf for some weeks by the time the electors had made their decision. He had set off from Austria in early march 1298 and has been playing cat and mouse with Adolf’s army, marching all across Swabia, between Ulm and Breisach. In June Albrecht decided to take his troops further north along the Rhine river, whilst Adolf followed him on the opposite shore.

The whole game of marching here and there continued around Alzey and Worms until news reached both camps  that Adolf was definitely deposed and Albrecht elected the new king. That meant the electors could now officially get involved in the fighting and with Mainz and Cologne not far, Adolf von Nassau needed to strike before support for his enemy arrived.

On July 2nd, 1298 Albrecht lined his army up on top of a hill near the village of Göllheim. Adolf von Nassau who came from the North had to attack uphill and into the sun. For Albrecht the key was to hold out and inflict as much damage on his opponent as possible. He knew help would arrive in the end. Adolf on the other hand needed an immediate and comprehensive victory. So he fought ferociously, leading his troops from the front, as any good medieval monarch should. Albrecht allegedly kept his cool on top of his little hill.  

And he was right to do so. The odds were stacked too far against Adolf. In one of the rolling attacks he was pushed of his horse. Heavily wounded he got onto another steed, but he was unable to put his helmet back on, the sun was blinding him and he was felled by one of Albrecht’s men.

Adolf’s body was taken to a Cistercian monastery. Albrecht did not permit the dead king to be buried in Speyer cathedral, as Adolf had requested. But the next emperor Henry VII allowed the transfer and that is where he still lies. One of his descendant had his funerary monument remade in 1824 and it now shows him life size praying in the vestibule of the cathedral.

The counts of Nassau-Weilburg never became kings again. Their lands, much enlarged later became a duchy with its centre in Wiesbaden. And in 1890 they became the grand dukes of Luxemburg where they still rule to this day

The cousins of our king Adolf of Nassau rose even higher. One of them was William of Nassau-Dillenburg born in 1533. As a child William inherited vast estates in the low countries as well as the principality of Orange from a French cousin. That principality was named not after the fruit, but after a lovely little town in Provence that features one the best preserved Roman theatres in the world and is well worth a visit. William took on the name William of Orange and became also known as William the Silent when he led the Dutch protestant rebellion against the Spanish. The house of Orange still reigns over the Netherlands and as a mark of respect the Dutch national teams play in an orange strip.

But for our narrative, these greatest moments for the house of Nassau lie in the far future. Our preoccupation is now Albrecht of Habsburg, finally king, seven years after his father’s death. We will find out how he gets on next time. I hope you will join us again. And do not forget to tune in on BBC iplayer on April 8th at 8:30 GMT for the final of University Challenge and watch Justin Lee do his thing!

Allezeit Mehrer des reiches

Martin Rady in his highly amusing and exceptionally well written book on the Habsburg said quote “The remainder of Rudolf’s reign up to his death in 1291 was a failure. He did not manage to have himself crowned emperor by the pope and had to make do with the title of king…it was a false dawn, both for the Holy Roman empire and for the Habsburgs” end quote.

I most humbly disagree. The 13 years following the battle of Durnkrut are some of the most transformative for the Empire and the fledgling concept of German and Germany. This episode will try to make the case for Rudolf I, founder of the house of Habsburg and one of the most impactful medieval rulers of the empire.

TRANSCRIPT

Hello and welcome to the history of the Germans: Episode 141 – Rudolf I  Semper Augustus Allezeit Mehrer des Reiches.

Martin Rady in his highly amusing and exceptionally well written book on the Habsburg said quote “The remainder of Rudolf’s reign up to his death in 1291 was a failure. He did not manage to have himself crowned emperor by the pope and had to make do with the title of king…it was a false dawn, both for the Holy Roman empire and for the Habsburgs” end quote.

I most humbly disagree. The 13 years following the battle of Durnkrut are some of the most transformative for the Empire and the fledgling concept of German and Germany. This episode will try to make the case for Rudolf I, founder of the house of Habsburg and one of the most impactful medieval rulers of the empire.

Before we go into the story and the respective arguments, just a few words about the way the History of the Germans is run. This show is advertising free which means the only way I can get compensated is by the generosity of patrons. And I must say, your willingness to keep this show on the road is overwhelming – so thank you so much. And it is worth it. I recently listened to a podcast I hugely respect and that is with a network that had approached me to join a few months ago. This podcast was now featuring cryptocurrency advertising, something I personally would not want to be seen endorsing in any form. So a specially heartfelt thanks to William Schmidt, Jantje B., Donka P., Brian A., Moritz L. and Randy F. who have already signed up, saving your host from shame and embarrassment.

Talking about shame and embarrassment, I have to make a correction. In the last episode I described the beginning of the battle of Durnkrut stating that Rudolf’s Flemish slingers hurled their stones at the Bohemians whose Cumans and Sarmatians responded with clouds of arrows. It was the other way around. The Flemish slingers fought for Ottokar whilst the Cumans and Sarmatians had joined Rudolf’s forces from Hungary. Apologies for that.

So now back to the show.

On 26th of August 1278 the body of Ottokar II, king of Bohemia is lies almost naked on the battlefield of Dürnkrut. Scavengers have stripped off his precious armor. The great golden king is no more.

His seven year old son, Wenceslaus comes to king Rudolf to sue for peace and the return of the body of his father that had been displayed in the Minoritenkirche in Vienna, a church Ottokar himself had founded in his heyday when he was duke of Austria. Wenceslaus was allowed to take his predecessor’s remains home and not only that. He was betrothed to Judith, the youngest of Rudolf’s surviving children. The marriage would take place seven years later when bride and groom had grown up to be at least teenagers.

Rudolf was on top of the world. His enemy and only serious rival for the crown was defeated and dead. He was in control of not just one, but three duchies, Austria, Styria and Carinthia. His policies to rebuild royal power in the empire were gaining traction and lands and rights lost to the crown during the interregnum were gradually returned.

For many in the German parts of the empire it seemed as if the golden days of the Hohenstaufen were about to return. For the cities in the south Rudolf’s reforms were of particular importance.

As we have seen in the series about the Hanseatic League, the 13th and14th century was a time during which new and extremely profitable trade routes opened up. Merchants handling these wares grew rich, artisans gained access to new customers and the city’s population found employment in the various workshops. Trade fairs, events that would attract merchants and dealers from across europe are flourishing. The Leipziger Messe can claim to be the oldest recorded trade fair still in operation, dating back to 1165. Frankfurt Messe was founded in 1240 and is also still going strong. Cities like Nördlingen, Donauwörth, Eichstätt, Regensburg, Schaffhausen, Worms, Speyer and Naumburg and further north, Cologne, Duisburg Aachen and Utrecht were connecting points in a pan-European trading system.

All of these cities had overlords. Some dated back to Roman times and were seats of bishops, others had been founded by emperors, dukes or counts. These overlords became increasingly a problem. For one, they regularly demanded some form of tax of other financial contribution. Moreover, these high and mighty lord and not so saintly bishops did not understand much about trade and the importance of reliable currencies, open transportation routes and the rule of law.

The rift between the city councils and the overlords deepened over time. The cities seized their opportunity during the interregnum when central authority weakened and several of the important principalities fragmented. Many threw off the yoke of their overlords. Having gained independence was certainly a great source of pride and joy, but also left them with a problem once things settled down again. How could they protect themselves against the new territorial lordships that were forming again all around them.

That is where Rudolf saw a way to further strengthen royal power. If he took some of these cities under his protection, he himself or his vogt could fend off rapacious lords and in return the cities would pay compensation for these efforts in the form of taxes. That is how in the late 13th century many cities, in particular in the south west of Germany became imperial cities. This alliance between the Imperial cities and the emperors became a building block of the Holy Roman empire.

Not all imperial cities paid though. Some were free cities, in particular large ones like Cologne, Mainz, Lubeck, Basel and Strasburg. A free city would not pay tax thanks to privileges they had obtained over the centuries. But it wasn’t just the paper that mattered here.  A great free city like Cologne simply did not need the protection of the vogt against some rapacious count in the neighborhood. Smaller places like Nördlingen or Memmingen did.

That also explains why there are so many more  imperial cities in the former lands of the Hohenstaufen, in Franconia and Swabia. That is where the royal power was more significant and where the Vogt could indeed command sufficient forces to ride to the rescue of a city under siege. In the north, the king had little influence and hence few cities were counting on a royal officer for protection. Only the largest and most powerful gained that status, Lubeck, Hamburg and Bremen for example. But still important places like Rostock, Wismar or Stralsund, never obtained the status of a free or imperial city. The king or emperor was simply too far away…

The city taxes added a neat 8000 marks of silver to the royal budget, which was more than the Habsburg lands in Switzerland and Alsace provided. So nothing to be sniffed at.

During his remaining 13 years Rudolf expanded his system of Vogts covering large areas and working hard to regain royal possessions. South of the Main river that involved recruiting members of the local aristocracy and putting them in charge. They were deliberately chosen amongst the barons and counts and not amongst the Ministeriales or knightly class as they were increasingly called. Rudolf wanted to avoid the situation where the senior lords felt he was building up a bureaucracy of men tied to him be bonds of servitude as the Hohenstaufen and Salians had done. It was all part of the First amongst Equals approach.

When he looked to the northern part of his empire, this model did not quite work though. First, there were far fewer imperial possessions in what used to be the stem duchy of Saxony. And the territorial lords there were more powerful than in the South West. So instead of barons and counts, he appointed the dukes of Saxony and of Brunswick as the representatives of royal power in the north. These men could not be made to collect taxes, return royal lands or protect imperial cities against themselves, but they could, and would take on the role of judges under the Mainzer Landfrieden. That way Rudolf was able to curb some of the worst excesses in feuding even in the parts of the empire where his actual influence was modest.

One very significant feud he could however not prevent, the war of the Limburg succession. Limburg was a duchy roughly between Liege and Aachen. It was one of the successor principalities of the old duchy of Lothringia that played such an important role under the Ottonians and Salians but had gradually shifted out of the orbit of imperial policy under the Hohenstaufens. Being outside imperial direct control, several local powers dominated the region. These were the archbishops of Cologne, the dukes of Brabant and the House of Ardenne, the counts of Luxemburg. On the eastern side of the Rhine the counts of Berg had interest there as well.

When the last duke of Limburg passed away, these powers got into conflict over who should take over the territory. I spare you the genealogy but it ended up as a conflict between two sides, the count of Guelders who was supported by the archbishop of Cologne and the counts of Luxemburg on one hand. On the other side was count Adolf VII of Berg who could count on the duke of Brabant, the counts of Mark and Julich and importantly, the city of Cologne that had risen up against their archbishop.

This conflict culminated in the battle of Worringen on June 5, 1288. That was a pretty sizeable affair with about 4,000 men lining up on each side. It ended in a complete defeat of the archbishop of Cologne and his allies, the counts of Luxemburg as well as a minor count, Adolf von Nassau. In particular the Luxembourg suffered horrible losses, including several of the count’s brothers. It also re-arranged the whole regional politics. The city of Cologne shook off its archepiscopal overlord. The counts of Berg hugely expanded their territory which would later comprise Julich and Cleves as well, bringing them up into the rank of imperial princes and would even get them to furnish one of Henry VIII’s wives.

And – spoiler alert – the  battle of Worringen also featured some of the key protagonists in upcoming episodes, Adolf von Nassau, the archbishop of Cologne and the counts of Luxemburg.

Most importantly though the count of Berg rewarded some of his supporters, the inhabitants of a village where a brook, the Dussel flows into the Rhine with city rights. And because it was a village, a Dorf as it is in German on the Dussel, he called it Dusseldorf. Who ever claimed that medieval rulers lacked creativity?

It is said that the citizens and in particular the children of Düsseldorf were so excited about the count’s generosity, they spontaneously went on to do cartwheels on the presumably still muddy streets. Doing cartwheels became a symbol of the city of Düsseldorf and since I grew up there, I too learned to do cartwheels as a child, a skill I have now long lost. But my niece and nephew who still live there are impressive cartwheelers. You see, weird German customs are not confined to Bavaria. 

If you listened carefully you may notice that I use the words German and Germany much more regularly in this and the last two episodes. And that is deliberate. Unti the time of the Hohenstaufen, the history had been very much one of the empire and the empire in that era was perceived by its rulers and even by many in Europe as a universal empire. Its language was Latin and its politics were heavily focused on the papacy and Italy. Most of its rulers came from the German lands, but their ambitions went well beyond Germany. The reason this period is part of German history has more to do with the 19th and 20th century historians that incorporated it into the national narrative than the actual reality on the ground.

The story we are going through now, though still very much involved with the rest of europe, is more centered on the lands north of the alps, including what is today Germany. Its rulers were seeking their fortunes no longer in the south but within North and Eastern Europe – with exceptions obviously. And they became a lot more German. Frederick II preferred to write and speak Sicilian dialect and his chancery excelled in courtly Latin. Rudolf on the other hand spoke German and  changed the language of the royal administration to German. The culture of the royal court and the courts of the territorial princes culminated in the Minnesang, the German language version of courtly love. We are in a period of transition. I came across a book by Len Scales, professor for medieval history at the university of Durham talking about how the German identity was forged in the late Middle Ages between 1245 and 1414. I have listed it under the book recommendations for this season on the website. I am still working through it but what I have read so far resonates strongly with my own understanding, so expect more of that ilk as we go along.

But before we go there, we need to talk a bit more about cold hard power politics. And that is going through a transition as well. Though Rudolf heavily emphasizes the return of imperial lands and rights to the crown, he is also a ruler in the new mould. No longer is kingship or imperial power a function of the role alone, but it now rests more and more on the resources the ruler controls as his own fiefs or outright property. That concept is known as Hausmacht, probably best translated as the power of the imperial House.

Having started out as a powerful count in Swabia, but not as imperial princes and with an income that was dwarfed not just by Ottokar II but even by the archbishop of Cologne, Rudolf needed to elevate his and his a family’s  wealth if they wanted to hold on to the throne.

The first set of lands and rights he was eying up were the duchies of Austria, Styria and Carinthia he had wrestled from Ottokar II. After the battle of Durnkrut he stayed there for another 3 years, bringing his whole stay in Vienna to five years, a very long time for a medieval king who was supposed to be peripatetic showing himself all over the empire.

The reason for the long stay was that he wasn’t yet duke of Austria, Styria and Carinthia. Yes he controlled them, but only in his role as king of the Romans, not as his own or his family’s fief. And that makes a huge difference. The difference being that if a new king of the Romans was elected upon his death, the duchies would go to him, not to his sons.

So what he needed to do was to enfeoff the duchies either to himself or to one of his sons. That should be easy, after all, Rudolf is the king of the Romans and as such should be able to grant fiefs to whoever he liked. That is how things worked in England or France or Poland or Hungary. But there was a problem, a problem he had created himself, at least to a degree.

When Rudolf set up the revindication policy, that is the program to return former imperial lands back to the royal purse, he stated that all lands have to be returned that had not been enfeoffed by the king and the electors acting together.

That requirement of having the electors signing off to the transfer was needed to overcome all those awards granted by the weak kings of the interregnum. For instance king Richard of Cornwall had confirmed Ottokar as duke of Austria in 1269. If that award had been valid, there would not have been grounds enough to throw Ottokar off the land.

The explicit proviso that the electors needed to sign off wasn’t entirely Rudolf’s invention. In the past most large scale enfeoffments, in particular the award of whole duchies happened at imperial diets which allowed for an involvement of the imperial princes in the decision. So it was an established process that the king could not just enfeoff someone all by himself. But up until Rudolf, the involvement of the imperial princes was not formalized. In particular there wasn’t a list of princes who needed to be consulted. An imperial diet was able to act even if some imperial lords had failed to attend. But now, Rudolf said that was not enough. All seven electors had have signed off.

To make clear what he meant, he also firmed up who these electors were. And these were the seven electors we know today, the archbishops of Cologne, Mainz and Trier, the king of Bohemia, the duke of Saxony, the margrave of Brandenburg and the Count Palatinate on the Rhine. Why those? Well, apart from the archbishops, they had all married daughters of Rudolf.

So what is the problem. Well the problem is that if all awards of lands and titles in the past are invalid without signatures from all seven electors, well then all future awards also require these signatures.

And so for Rudolf to become duke of Austria or at least one of his sons to get the title, Rudolf needed the consent of all seven electors. And that wasn’t so easy any more. As we heard last time, the imperial princes had initially supported Rudolf’s attack on Ottokar II. But once they realized that they had made the “poor count” into a powerful magnates, their enthusiasm waned. And so might have the lure of Rudolf’s daughters.

Negotiations dragged on until 1282 before he could cajole the electors into enfeoffing Austria, Styria and Carinthia to his two sons, Albert and Rudolf who were to hold the duchies in common. That was a somewhat unusual construct and probably came about because king Rudolf did not want to go through the process twice should one of his sons die in the still incessant warfare. But it also hints at a Habsburg specialty. The Habsburgs throughout their history acted as a clan. Yes, there was always an individual in charge, the emperor or the king of Spain etc. but all these archdukes and archduchesses kept working on supporting the success of the dynasty. Sure they had their squabbles and some will be extremely violent. But overall, they operated as a block. That was certainly a contributing factor in their success but also explains the need to bring the meandering branches of the family back together by marrying the cousins, which had some well known implications. This acting as one dynasty goes back to before Rudolf, but manifests itself on the imperial stage for the first time here.

Though Rudolf had been confident that Austria was in the bag after his victory over Ottokar, he did not believe this was enough. The electors had made it clear that he could not take Bohemia from Ottokar’s heir, so he started looking for alternative options.

His first target was the almost forgotten kingdom of the Arelat, the theoretical successor to the kingdom of Burgundy. The last emperor to have been crowned king of Burgundy had been Barbarossa who had received the crown in the city of Arles in Provence, hence the name of the kingdom, the Arelat. Rudolfs plan was to make his son Hartmann the king of Arelat. That would not require the agreement of the electors, which made it easier. What made it harder was that the Arelat was the property of Charles of Anjou, the king of Sicily, one of the most powerful men in Europe. But Rudolf had obtained the support of Pope Gregory X for this adventure as an inducement for him to go on crusade. That effort did end with 18-year old Hartmann being run through by a Savoyard nobleman in his attempt to get south. Rudolf was much aggrieved by the loss of this, his favorite son and intended successor.

Meanwhile He had opened up another frontier in Swabia where he tried to gain his son Rudolf the duchy of Swabia that was vacant since the fall of the Hohenstaufen and its lands had been distributed amongst whoever had been quickest with the sword. So to achieve the elevation of young Rudolf to duke of Swabia, some noble lords needed to be relieved from their properties. Egon, count of Freiburg was one of the targets, amongst others. But this effort ran into stiff resistance from another important Swabian lord, Count Eberhard of Württemberg. The Württemberg’s had been counts palatinate of Swabia since time immemorial and held a strong position controlled from their home in Tübingen. They gathered a coalition of Swabian lords unwilling to be expropriated in the interest of the House of Habsburg and after a half-decade of war, the two Rudolfs gave up on that project.

The other main objective for Rudolf and his sons was to obtain the imperial crown. And initially the chances were pretty good. After all it had been Pope Gregory X who had demanded that the electors choose a strong leader who would mount the much prophesied imperial crusade to the holy land. Pope and king met in Lausanne and agreed All Saints Day of 1275 as the date for the coronation in Rome. It was Rudolf who did not make it as he was tied up with the conflict over Austria. Pope Gregory X died in 1276.

Gregory’s successor, Innocent V was a lot less accommodating. He demanded that Rudolf gave up all imperial rights in the Romagna. That was a largely theoretical demand since the empire had very limited if any influence in Northern Italy at this stage. But Rudolf had just recently added the title Semper Augustus to the title of king of Rome. That refers back to the ancient titles of the Roman emperors and translates literally as “ever exalted”. But Rudolfs Chancery mistranslated it into German as “allezeit Mehrer des Reiches” which would be “forever augmentor of the realm” in English. Therefore giving away imperial rights felt hard to square with the claim to forever increasing the size of the empire.

Pope Innocent V died before negotiations could be concluded. The next two popes also lasted barely a few months, one of them, John XXI, the only Portuguese ever to become pope, was killed when the roof of his medical laboratory collapsed.

The next one, Nicolas III was of a more robust constitution. He lasted 2. ½ years, which seemed a lot compared to his predecessors. It was enough for Pope and king conclude their negotiations and even set another date, but then Nicolas III unexpectedly lost consciousness and died.

Entering stage left pope Martin IV who was another upgrade in the longevity stakes. He lasted 5 years. But that was no use to Rudolf since he was a strong supporter of Charles of Anjou, the king of Sicily who did not want any German ruler coming south and challenge his control of Italy.  Charles of Anjou and Martin IV died in 1285, which re-opened the possibility of an imperial coronation. Another date was set for 1287, but this time the roadblocks were up in Germany. The bishops refused to raise the funds for an Italian campaign, punishing Rudolf for his implicit support for the cities who were wriggling out of episcopal control.

Rudolf had survived 8 popes, who with only one exceptions were willing to crown him, but he still did not manage to get to Rome and become emperor.

The implications of that failure went well beyond having to live with the diminished prestige of being just a King of the Romans.

Under the previous three great dynasties, succession from father to son was usually achieved by having the son elected king of the Romans whilst the father was still alive. That allowed the ruling family to formally recognise the right of princes to elect the emperor whilst at the same time ensuring the succession.

But to be able to have the son elected king, the father has to first be upgraded to emperor. There has not been a precedent in the empire of having two Kings of the Romans in parallel. And even in France where such arrangements had been more typical, dual kingship had not been practiced since the 11th century.

So without an imperial coronation, the only way Rudolf could hope to ensure the continuation of his dynasty on the throne was by receiving firm commitments from the electors that they would choose one of his sons.

At which point there is the question, which of his three sons should be put forward. Albert was his eldest son and should have been the natural candidate. But two things made his candidature difficult. Albert had taken on the administration of the Austrian lands whilst his father and brothers pursued all these projects in the Arelat and in Swabia. And whilst a competent manager, he was also a harsh taskmaster who instilled little sympathy amongst the electors. And there was the problem that Austria was the immediate neighbour of the most important secular elector, the king of Bohemia which had historically been a source of constant conflict.

So king Rudolf tried to push his younger sons. First Hartmann who however died very young in 1281 and then the other, Rudolf. Rudolfs candidature was going reasonably well and king Wenceslaus II of Bohemia agreed to support young Rudolf in 1290, which would have brought the votes from Brandenburg and Saxony along. That was no mean feat given that king Rudolf had defeated Wenceslaus father in a battle where he had also perished.

But the premature death of young Rudolf in 1290 stopped this plan in its tracks. Albert, the duke of Austria was the only son left and the one nobody liked.

Sons wasn’t the only thing Rudolf was running out of, he was also running out of time. He had already been 55 years of age when he was elected in 1273. If the electors had hoped he would only last a few years, they must have been quite thoroughly disappointed. Rudolf stayed on for a full 18 years. But by 1291 he was seriously old. Medieval rulers who spent most of their life on horseback, interspersed with the occasional battle did not last to be 73. Even Frederick Barbarossa who contemporaries regarded as exceptionally long lived, expired aged 67 in a shallow river in Anatolia.

On July 14th, 1291 was the end of the road for Rudolf von Habsburg. Seeing his end approaching he had travelled to Speyer, the burial place of the great Salian emperors to die. 2 days later he was entombed next to Philipp of Swabia in Speyer Cathedral. His gravestone features an incredibly lifelike portrait of the King of the Romans holding his sceptre in his right hand and wearing a mantle featuring the imperial eagle and the Habsburg lion. You can see an image of it in this episode’s artwork though you have to be aware that the rather prominent nose had been added in the 19th century based on a chronicler who had described it as so large, it cast its own shadow.

So, was Rudolf’s reign a disappointment as Martin Rady stated?

I am not in the habit of evaluating or ranking medieval rulers, but what I find surprising is that Rudolf did not get anywhere as much airtime in the German national narrative as he may warrant.

Not only is he the founder of the House of Habsburg, arguably the most significant European dynasty. But he also made major contributions to the political structure of the Holy roman empire that would last for another 500plus years. He settled the list of electors, he established the system of the Landvogte that later transitioned into the imperial circles, he revived the Mainzer Landfriede that became one of the constitutional bases of the empire. He transitioned royal power into the Hausmacht model, where the emperor relied more on his personal possessions than the royal domain and he fostered the network of imperial cities that is the reason Germany today has multiple commercial, cultural and political centres, rather than being all focused on a capital city. 

For someone who had such a significant impact on history, he does get very little recognition in the national narrative and the school curriculum.

I think this may have happened not despite his achievements, but because of them.

When the historians of the 19th and early 20th century surveyed German history, Rudolf’s efforts to stabilise the realm were actions that had led to the structure of the Holy Roman empire of hundreds of principalities only loosely connected by weak institutions, a structure they blamed for the delayed formation of a nation state. Plus a Prussian-led Germany regarded the Habsburgs if not necessary as enemies, but still a force that led Germany towards a catholic, multinational historic cul-de-sac.

After the war when the narrative moved away from the nationalistic storyline and historians sought to frame the medieval empire as a European endeavour foreshadowing the European Union, Rudolf’s inward focus and fostering of a German identity did not resonate.

We will see whether Rudolf will gain more recognition in the future as a fundamental re-evaluation of the Holy Roman Empire gets under way.

The other thing we will see is whether Rudolf’s son Albert, the one nobody likes will become king and prolong the time of the Habsburgs on the throne. I hope you will join us again next week.